Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0021035, Tue, 7 Dec 2010 16:12:35 +0000

Subject
Re: [NABOKOV-L] [Sighting] Gonçalo M. Tavares "Bib lioteca"
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Jansy: you have (in my book!) earned Tavares a wider English audience. How
can we encourage more translations? We have met, and giggled over, similar
author-caricatures: clerihews for the clerisy? Haiku for the highbrow? But
fantasy-sketches offer a broader canvas for creative mockery.

The better snide jokes always embed some element of Œreality¹ (whatever
that means). However, readers must never fall for the various dubious Proof
Methods in the endless search for Truth (repeat the whatever warning).

Popperian-Nabokovians (like BB, SHB and me) know that Deduction beats
Induction; Induction beats Proof by Assertion, Proof by Epigram, Proof by
Sarcasm, ... We do allow, under duress, VN¹s Proof by Strong, Superior
Authority (see Tavares) and even, for an occasional laugh, VN¹s Proof by
Spoonerism/Anagram.

Fun to guess (or can we deduce, induct?) who the three men are meant to be
in Tavares¹ tale. With Pale Fire never far from my mind, I wondered if they
are Shade/Kinbote-Botkin/King Charles, having somehow escaped Nabokov¹s
authorial control, are disputing their own identities. In comes the creator
to end the meta-meta-fictional nonsense?

Stan Kelly-Bootle


On 06/12/2010 15:19, "jansymello" <jansy@AETERN.US> wrote:

> The cover of "Biblioteca" ("Library"), dated 2004 and published in Brazil
> only in 2009, informs that the young Portuguese writer Gonçalo M. Tavares has
> had his works translated and distributed in Spain, India, Italy, Sweden,
> Hungary, Holland, Belgium, Brazil and Portugal.
> I found no indication that his books were translated into English.
>
> In "Biblioteca," the list of authors whose work inspired him to create a short
> fantasy-sketch runs to over two-hundred names. Most of them appear in the
> alphabetical index, under their first name, such as J.D.Salinger, Jean Genet,
> James Joyce, Hart Crane, Robert Browning, Harold Bloom.
> Others, as Apuleio, Aristóteles, Empédocles, Euripedes, Dostoievsky and
> Nabokov, are just that - singles.
> Here is what he constructed about Nabokov:
>
> "A tall animal with a dictionary in his pocket entered a room where three men
> have been engrossed, for seven hours, in a debate about who was the first, the
> second and the third man at the table.
> A tall animal, with a profile that is incompatible with the multitude, menaces
> to open his mouth with the same intensity as the threat of wielding a weapon
> promotes. Nevertheless he only carries his tallness and a dictionary. And the
> way by which he made his entrance into the room. However, the three men were
> too weak and the man was so strong."
> (my translation).
> //schnip


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