Dec 27, 2009
Ada or Ardor is the most luxuriant, playful, difficult, allusive, ambitious, and overblown of Nabokov's novels. It is a memoir largely written by Van Veen when he is in his nineties that narrates his love for his sister Ada. As “a family chronicle,” it has a hefty nineteenth century range, replete with printed genealogies, thwarted romances, duels, and a happily-ever-after ending in which the venerable Ada is finally reunited with her childhood swain, Van.
The inattentive reader will, however, tread a tortuous path through the text, for Nabokov has laced it with...
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