Colleagues,

I discussed the archeology of CCL in "The World of Nabokov's Stories" (1998). In this book, and also in my article "After Rapture and Recapture: Transformations in the Drafts of Nabokov's Stories (1999), I wrote at some length about the story's textual history. Incidentally, at the upcoming Nabokov Readings 2014 in St. Petersburg, where I'm heading as of this writing, Mikhail Efimov will be presenting a paper on CCL and the legacy of Russian symbolism.

See some of you next week in Spb.

Maxim D. Shrayer
www.shrayer.com

On Friday, June 27, 2014, NABOKV-L, English <nabokv-l@holycross.edu> wrote:
NB:  John Morris points out that the original version of the story published in the Atlantic Monthly is not quite the same as that collected in Nabokov's Dozen, the version which appears in the Stories (pp. 426-33).  He himself mentioned some slight differences in a note: "The Steel-and-Leather Guys" in The Nabokovian 42 (1999): 23-25.
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Susan Elizabeth Sweeney
Co-Editor, NABOKV-L
 
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--
===
Prof. Dr. Maxim D. Shrayer
Professor of Russian, English, and Jewish Studies
Department of Slavic & Eastern Languages and Literatures
Boston College
210 Lyons Hall, 140 Commonwealth Avenue
Chestnut Hill, MA 02467-3804 USA
e-mail: shrayerm@bc.edu
tel. 617-552-3911 fax. 617-552-3913
http://fmwww.bc.edu/SL-V/ShrayerM.html


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All private editorial communications are read by both co-editors.