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Recruiting
'Recruiting' (July 1935) starts off as if it is offering yet another character sketch from émigré life, but in the end it turns out to be concerned with the joys of literary composition. Vasily Ivanovich is a tired old Russian émigré who has lost all his relatives and is now desperately poor, having 'reached the point where a man no longer asks himself on what he will live tomorrow, but merely wonders what he had lived on the day before' (TD,p.103).
His beloved sister is dead, and on the day of the story he has visited her grave whilst at the burial of another émigré, Professor D. The story switches from third to first person mode to describe a curious sense of spiritual uplift he nevertheless feels whilst viewing the world around him as he sits in a public garden enjoying the sunshine:
The narrator then indulges in one of those speculations regarding the relationship between one level of fictionality and another which can make readers feel that they are being asked to turn their own minds inside-out:
Before the narrator can speak with this man onto whom he has projected his own wellbeing, Vasily gets up from the bench and walks away. But the narrator feels that he has anyway captured his character forever for his own literary purposes, and he tells us that the man will appear in a future chapter of his novel. But then another narrator steps into the story, reducing the inner narrator to "my representative, the man with the Russian newspaper" (p.110) and reveals that we have not two but three levels of fictionality. It would be misleading to dwell too much on parallels between two writers so dissimilar as Nabokov and Virginia Woolf, but 'Recruiting' is remarkably similar to 'An Unwritten Novel' which deals with this subject of imagined lives and their imprecise connexion with a 'true identity' which is itself fictional. In the light of the fictions-within-fictions which have become such a tiresome cliché of postmodernism, it is worth noting that although this sudden appearance of a hitherto concealed outer narrator is something of a trick against which the reader has no defense, Nabokov only uses the device once (rather like his acrostic at the end of 'The Vane Sisters'). And is the story merely a trick? Well - no, because it is in the end designed to create a character, whether his name is Vasily or not, who carries his émigré status, his age, and his poverty with a certain amount of dignity and pride. He is another actor in the large cast of Nabokov's record of the emigration, and if he is produced via a certain amount of literary sleight of hand, he lives nonetheless for that.
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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