In response to Ron Rosenbaum's question, "Does anyone else believe Hazel Shade's ghost somehow dictated 'Pale Fire'?":
 
Of course not, and Brian Boyd never made such a silly claim.  If you'll reread his "Nabokov's 'Pale Fire'," you'll see that he makes an ingenious case, well supported by textual evidence, that Hazel Shade's shade influences Kinbote's commentary in a number of complex and significant areas.  Perhaps the best way to put it is to employ Boyd's phrase (on p. 168) -- Hazel "helps Kinbote dream" his dream of Zembla.
 
There is never any suggestion that Hazel has dictated anything.  Boyd's argument, page after page, is always for influence and pattern-making, never ghostwriting.  Do I believe in this interpretation?  I certainly do.  Anyone who doubts it needs to counter Boyd's textual points, case by case; he is not offering a hunch, but rather a sustained argument.  I will add that there remain, in my opinion, important interpretative questions about "Pale Fire" that Boyd's book has not settled, but the presence of Hazel as a ghostly influence is not one of them.  The case is simply too strong, and entirely in keeping with VN's literary and metaphysical preoccupations.
 
Best,
 
J. Morris   
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