Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Há 5 dias · Já no prefácio, num texto sensível, emocionado, Dmitri Nabokov, o filho de Vladimir Nabokov que organizou o livro, não esconde seu encantamento pelo texto. “Veio às minhas mãos na primavera de 2005, uma história tão surpreendentemente sentimental que, antes de traduzi-la, tive de sanar algumas dúvidas quanto à sua autenticidade", revelou Dmitri.

  2. 8 de mai. de 2024 · Subjects. North American Literatures. On a summer's day in 1950, Vladimir Nabokov, fifty-one years old and riddled with doubts about the novel he was working on, headed for the garden incinerator to burn his drafts of Lolita' s first chapters. His wife, Véra, caught up with him, and at her urging Nabokov paused to reconsider.

  3. 10 de mai. de 2024 · May 10, 2024. When I was conducting my research for my novel A Revolver to Carry at Night, I immersed myself in the correspondence, biographies, and works of Vera and Vladimir Nabokovs biographies. It was in Nabokovs poetic memoir, Speak, Memory, that I discovered the story that inspired Lolita, and began to understand Nabokov ...

  4. 12 de mai. de 2024 · Su obra literaria es una de las más grandes, complejas e imaginativas del siglo XX y una de las aventuras más personales, en la que el tratamiento del amor, el sexo (el erotismo era para él un...

  5. Há 5 dias · Uma obra que merece destaque é “Ulisses”, de James Joyce. Nessa narrativa complexa e experimental, o autor nos apresenta um dia na vida de Leopold Bloom, explorando diferentes estilos literários e técnicas narrativas. Outro livro que não pode faltar é “Lolita”, de Vladimir Nabokov.

  6. 29 de abr. de 2024 · Vladimir Nabokov lives with his wife Véra in the Montreux Palace Hotel in Montreux, Switzerland, a resort city on Lake Geneva which was a favorite of Russian aristocrats of the last century. They dwell in a connected series of hotel rooms that, like their houses and apartments in the United States, seem impermanent, places of exile.

  7. 14 de mai. de 2024 · Within Vladimir Nabokov’s repertory of elaborate trickery, Transparent Things 1 stands out as an unusually slim, schematic volume, in the words of the New York Times Book Review ‘a small mock replica’ of a grander, life-long architectural enterprise 2. Nabokov first published the 104-page novella in 1972, to little critical consensus.