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A Bad Day
'A Bad Day' (1931) is one of a pair of stories (the other is 'Orache') which for Nabokov are unusual in two senses. First, they have the same young boy, Peter Shishkov, as protagonist, and second they are set in pre-revolutionary Russia 'around 1910' (DS, p.44). The impulse behind the stories is quite clearly a combination of evoking the past and making a biographical record of a lost age. This is understandable given the prominence of personal loss in Nabokov's life, but strangely enough the stories seem to suffer because of it.
The reader is given every reason to sympathise with Peter throughout his boredom and his humiliation. As a character sketch it is a perfectly credible portrait of a sensitive young adolescent. He 'did not want to hurt people' (p.29); he behaves co-operatively even though he feels bored; he has a crush on a young girl and admires his slightly older cousin, Vasily. The children are hurtful by saying that they will not speak to him any more and accusing him of being a poseur. It is precisely for these reasons that Andrew Field sees the story as 'a universal experience shared by all children' (LA, p.50) and he is surely right to say that this is 'one of the comparatively small number of Nabokov's works which seek directly to engage the reader's strong sympathy' (LA,p.50). But this is not all one might say of Peter Shishkov - for when he thinks the other children have gone on a picnic without him he plans to fake his own suicide. He
We may not judge him severely for such self indulgence, but there is perhaps some justification for his peers calling him 'the poseur'.
This degree of wordplay and alliterative ingenuity may be poetically impressive, but it seems excessive given the demands for strict significance and compression demanded by the short story as a literary form. Perhaps it belongs more properly with the chapters of biographical reminiscence which go to make up Speak, Memory.
Collected Stories is a collection of sixty-five stories drawn from Nabokov's entire working life. They range from the early meditations on love, loss, and memory, through to his later technical experiments, with unreliable story-tellers and games of literary hide-and-seek. All of them are characterised by a stunning command of language, rich imagery, and a powerful lyrical inventiveness. Edited by his son, Dmitri Nabokov, who keeps the family torch aflame.
Studying Fiction is an introduction to the basic concepts and the technical terms you will need when making a study of prose fiction. It shows you how to apply the elements of literary analysis by explaining them one at a time, and then showing them at work in a series of short stories which are reproduced as part of the book. Contains stories by Arthur Conan Doyle, Katherine Mansfield, Thomas Hardy, Joseph Conrad, D.H. Lawrence, and Charles Dickens.
In this captivating interpretation of Nabokov's career through
the prism of his shorter fiction, Maxim Shrayer explores how Nabokov eclipsed the
achievements of the great Russian masters of the short story. Even as he became - in exile from Russia and his native tradition - an American writer, Nabokov maintained a dialogic relationship with Anton Chekhov, Ivan Bunin, and other masters of the short story form. This is VN the radical traditionalist.
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