At p. 377 of Field's 1986 book, The Life and Art of Vladimir Nabokov, he describes his Nabokov archive as follows:
 

“This book is based in large part upon a personal archive. Of particular importance are fourteen twenty-minute tapes which contain extensive conversations with Nabokov and his family and friends. These tapes have what are probably the only free conversations that Nabokov ever allowed himself to hold while being tape-recorded.


Other sources: Three note books in which I made notes while talking and shortly after talking w VN and others, ten index cards, twenty pieces of hotel stationary.


  Nabokov’s letters to his mother betw 1920 and 1936 (twenty seven pages.)


 Nabokov personal diary for 1952.


  Seventy five patgges of Nabokov family history in notes and letters from Nabokov’s first cousin, Serge Nabokov of Brussels.


  Photo records of all archival materials that were loaned to me by Nabokov as I worked. In all there were 1,870 exposures including: letters from Nabokov’s father, correspondence with Contemporary Annals, letters to George Hessen, Mark Aldanav, 378, Vladislav Khodasevich, Ivan Lukash, and Yuly Aikhenval’d, let. From Rachmanainoff, ….


  Archives: Cambridge, Columbia U, cornell, Stanford, Wellesley, Thomas and Julia Whitney Foundation of Washington, Connecticut, Princess Zinaida Scakowskoi of Paris. Hundreds of people answered my letters…."




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