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Literary FictionClassicsModernist Fiction

Vladimir Nabokov

Russian-American · b. 1899

7 books reviewed Avg rating 4.4 / 5Top rating 4.6 / 5

National Medal for Literature (1973)

Vladimir Nabokov was a Russian-American novelist whose Lolita — one of the most brilliantly written and morally challenging novels of the twentieth century — remains essential and deeply contested.

Vladimir Nabokov was born in St Petersburg in 1899, fled Russia after the Revolution, lived in Europe, and finally settled in the United States, where he wrote Lolita — first published by the Olympia Press in Paris in 1955 after being rejected by multiple American publishers — and became one of the most celebrated novelists of his era. He wrote in English with a command of the language that most native speakers do not possess, and Lolita demonstrates that command on almost every page: the prose is genuinely beautiful, witty, and elaborate in ways that can make readers forget, briefly, what they are reading.

That is precisely the problem, and Nabokov understood this. Lolita is a novel narrated by Humbert Humbert, a paedophile who abuses a twelve-year-old girl over several years while constructing an elaborate aesthetic justification for what he does. The brilliance of the novel lies in the gap between Humbert’s eloquence and what the reader is required to see through it — Dolores Haze’s actual experience, glimpsed in fragments beneath the narrator’s self-serving prose. Some readers experience this as a profound moral investigation of the way art and beauty can be complicit in harm; others argue that the novel’s pleasures are inseparable from the abuse it aestheticizes, and that this makes it irredeemably problematic.

Both responses are defensible. Lolita is a novel that demands its readers do the work of ethical reading — of seeing through a beautiful surface to what it conceals and what it costs. It is not a comfortable read and is not meant to be.

7 Books Reviewed

Speak, Memory book cover

Speak, Memory

by Vladimir Nabokov

4.6

Nabokov's autobiography covers his aristocratic Russian childhood, his family's flight after the Revolution, and his years as an émigré writer in Europe — in prose of such concentrated beauty that it reads as much as poetry as memoir.

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Lolita book cover
Editor's Pick

Lolita

by Vladimir Nabokov

4.5

Humbert Humbert's confession of his obsession with and abuse of twelve-year-old Dolores Haze — told in prose of devastating beauty by a narrator who is both brilliant and monstrous.

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Pale Fire book cover

Pale Fire

by Vladimir Nabokov

4.5

A 999-line poem by fictional American poet John Shade, followed by an obsessive commentary by his neighbour Charles Kinbote — who may be the exiled king of a fictional country called Zembla. One of the most formally inventive novels ever written.

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Pnin book cover

Pnin

by Vladimir Nabokov

4.3

Timofey Pnin, a Russian émigré professor at a small American college, navigates American life with earnest incomprehension and frequent misfortune — Nabokov's most warm and compassionate novel.

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The Gift book cover

The Gift

by Vladimir Nabokov

4.3

Nabokov's last Russian-language novel follows young émigré poet Fyodor in 1920s Berlin as he writes, falls in love, and constructs an audacious biography of Russian literary critic Nikolai Chernyshevsky — an account of what it means to be a Russian writer in exile.

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Invitation to a Beheading book cover

Invitation to a Beheading

by Vladimir Nabokov

4.2

Cincinnatus C. is condemned to death for 'gnostical turpitude' — the crime of being opaque in a world where everyone is transparent. A surreal novel of imprisonment and execution that is also a meditation on consciousness, totalitarianism, and the artist's isolation.

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The Defense book cover
Editor's Pick

The Defense

by Vladimir Nabokov

4.1

Aleksandr Ivanovich Luzhin is a Russian chess grandmaster of astonishing talent and near-zero social function. As he prepares to play the match of his career against the Italian champion Turati, his obsessive mind begins to translate the world entirely into chess — and to break down when the patterns become inescapable.

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