Brain Pain discussion

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Ada, or Ardor
Ada, or Ardor - Nabokov 2013
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Discussion - Week Two - Ada, or Ardor - Part One, Chapter 26 - 43
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Also, the chapter on the family reunion, with Daddy Demon joining Mommy, Brother, Sister, and half-sister. The dialogue and discussion on dialogue was SO much fun to read. I love their play with so many different languages.
Ryan wrote: "Feel bad for not contributing to discussion all that much. Just finished Part Two, but there are many things I have to say about the second half of Part One. In particular, I LOVED the chapters tha..."
This whole book is quite the incest-fest, isn't it? A bit heavy handed at times, but as you say, the language is beautiful.
This whole book is quite the incest-fest, isn't it? A bit heavy handed at times, but as you say, the language is beautiful.

Hródric wrote: "There is something, in particular chapter XXXII, that made me think of the possibility of the character Mme. Larivière or Monparnasse were writing a novel and that novel is Ada or Ardor. I think Na..."
Yes, I can see that. Nabokov worked on this book for a long time and was certainly trying to write a "big" book, and so no surprise to see echoes of Proust, Flaubert, Tolstoy, et al. What puzzles me a bit is why he chose to foreground the incest as much as he does. Maybe a kind of "the acorn doesn't fall far from the oak" commentary.
Yes, I can see that. Nabokov worked on this book for a long time and was certainly trying to write a "big" book, and so no surprise to see echoes of Proust, Flaubert, Tolstoy, et al. What puzzles me a bit is why he chose to foreground the incest as much as he does. Maybe a kind of "the acorn doesn't fall far from the oak" commentary.
Mélange plus de temps et de mémoire.
(and more Nabakovian voyeurism)
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