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  2. Despair (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Despair_(novel)

    The book was a complete flop commercially and Nabokov only earned €40, a minuscule amount even in the 1930s. The issue was that Hutchinson's only published cheap, "popular" novels, which Despair was not, and thus it was distributed to the wrong audience. Nabokov would later lament that Despair was "a rhinoceros in a world of hummingbirds". [3]

  3. Vladimir Nabokov bibliography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Nabokov_bibliography

    The New Yorker, June 9 & 16, 2008 [3] (incorporated into the 17th and later printings of the paperback edition of The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov) (1923-01-07) [4] "The Word". The New Yorker, December 26, 2005 [5] (incorporated into the 15th and later printings of the paperback edition of The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov) (1926, Summer) "The Man ...

  4. Vladimir Nabokov - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladimir_Nabokov

    Coat of Arms of the Nabokov family, members of an ancient Russian nobility, granted to them on 1 January 1798 by Emperor Paul I Nabokov's grandfather Dmitry Nabokov, who was Justice Minister under Tsar Alexander II Nabokov's father, V. D. Nabokov, in his World War I officer's uniform, 1914 The Nabokov family mansion in Saint Petersburg; today it is the site of the Nabokov museum.

  5. Details of a Sunset and Other Stories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Details_of_a_Sunset_and...

    Details of a Sunset and Other Stories is a collection of thirteen short stories by Vladimir Nabokov.All were written in Russian by Nabokov between 1924 and 1935 as an expatriate in Berlin, Paris, and Riga and published individually in the émigré press at that time later to be translated into English by him and his son, Dmitri Nabokov.

  6. The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../The_Stories_of_Vladimir_Nabokov

    Nabokov's first collection of short stories, Nabokov's Dozen, contained thirteen total stories, which made for the structure of all of his subsequent collections, four in his lifetime. In the introduction to the collection, Dmitri Nabokov explains that the newly translated stories were to be his father's final collection. [ 1 ]

  7. Despair (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Despair_(film)

    Despair is a 1978 film directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder and starring Dirk Bogarde, based on the 1934 novel of the same name by Vladimir Nabokov. It was Fassbinder's first English-language film and was entered into the 1978 Cannes Film Festival. [4] Similarly to the novel, the tone of the film is ironic.

  8. The Man from the USSR and Other Plays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Man_from_the_USSR_and...

    It was written in 1923, when Nabokov was working as a farm labourer in France, and was first published on August 14 and 16 in Rul' (The Rudder), a Russian newspaper of which Nabokov's father had become editor in 1920. [3] It was a response to Scott's diaries, which Nabokov had seen in the British Museum some years earlier.

  9. A Russian Beauty and Other Stories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Russian_Beauty_and_Other...

    The short stories in this collection were originally written in Russian between 1927 and 1940 under the pseudonym Vladimir Sirin. [1] [2] Before being collated into short story collections, some were published by various European Russian émigré newspapers and magazines. [3]

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