The Secret History of Vladimir Nabokov
Andrea Pitzer Audio Book

Unabridged Audiobook

Listen to a sample Author: Andrea Pitzer Reader: Susan Boyce Running Time: 15hrs 12min
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Nabokov famously decreed his works "art for art's sake," drawing ire from other Russian exiles like Solzhenitsyn, who wondered why emigre authors like Nabokov did not write about the "blood flowing from Russia's living wounds." But was one of our greatest contemporary writers simply an amoral aesthete? Or did he hide an extensive network of clues deep within his text, clues that refer back to unimaginable horrors lost to oblivion? Almost fifty years after Nabokov wrote Pale Fire, his most mysterious work, journalist Andrea Pitzer stumbled across the "basement below" decades of Nabokov scholarship while at a seminar at Harvard, turning his most shocking novels topsy-turvy. Lolita surrenders Humbert Humbert's Jewish identity. The lunatic narrator of Pale Fire is unmasked as a survivor of the most notorious camp of the Gulag, a camp the world has forgotten. Chasing the real-world history buried in Nabokov's novels leads to important new discoveries about his life, including his veiled tribute to a brother killed in the Holocaust, his sister-in-law's wartime espionage, her long affair with a Nazi filmmaker, and Lenin's direct denunciation of Nabokov's father a full decade before the Revolution. Recently-declassified FBI files and recovered concentration camp histories shatter existing ideas about Nabokov's life and art--and even what we know about our own past.
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Customer Reviews

The Secret History of Vladimir Nabokov / Andrea Pitzer

“In a personal note Nabokov sent to Solzhenitsyn in 1974, on the day the dissident writer was expelled from the Soviet Union, Pitzer recognizes a telling connection between two writers who shared more than most critics have realized. For beneath the consummate artifice of Nabokov’s tales, Pitzer discerns a hidden historical vision aligned to a surprising degree with Solzhenitsyn’s. Largely undetected, the same nightmarish world of communist brutality that Solzhenitsyn exposed in his Gulag Archipelago lies embedded in the recesses of Nabokov’s major works, including Bend Sinister, Pnin, and Ada. The ugly historical effects of the Soviet Union’s open-air nuclear testing lie behind otherwise puzzling features of Pale Fire. Perhaps most surprising is the presence in the depths of Nabokov’s (in)famous Lolita of the horrific history of the Nazi death camps. Through her historically grounded readings of his fiction, Pitzer discredits the widespread but misleading perception of Nabokov as an art-for-art’s-sake writer indifferent to the moral and political exigencies of his day. But as readers explore his devious strategies for veiling sobering historical realities in aesthetic illusions, they slowly become aware of the interpretive responsibilities that Nabokov places on the reader. A penetrating analysis certain to compel a major reassessment of the Nabokov canon.” STARRED REVIEW ~Booklist (Bryce Christensen)


“[A] brilliant examination that adds to the understanding of an inspiring and enigmatic life.”  
Starred Review ~Kirkus Reviews

Product Information

Author: Andrea Pitzer Reader: Susan Boyce Running Time: 15hrs 12min Publisher: AudioGO Ltd Number of CDs: 0 File Quality: MP3 (128 kbps) Release Date: 3/13/13 D/L ISBN: 9781620647776
Buy Download $14.99 $25.95
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