Search results – NABOKV-L

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Item #DateTimeRecs Subject
00040294/12/1010:2224VN Bibliogrphay: Lolita & Pale Fire (fwd)
00072995/10/0208:4747VN refs
00083595/11/2515:31433VNCOLLATION (fwd)
00083995/11/2909:2335Nabokoviana
00109596/04/1514:2453VN DIALOG:S1a
00119096/07/3019:4847VN Bibliography: Blot & Motte
00219897/06/2215:0247Nabokov & the OULIPIANS (fwd)
00349198/11/1616:4185Braffort on NABOKV-L
00349398/11/1711:2392Re: Braffort on NABOKV-L (fwd)
00349498/11/1711:3455Re: Braffort on NABOKV-L (fwd)
00378999/03/1514:21307Tallinn-Tartu Nabokov Conference Abstracts (fwd)
00392499/04/1418:1018Re: Granita
00392599/04/1418:3122It's Eco
00399199/04/2509:092699A Birthday Tribute (fwd)

Item #402 (10 Dec 1994 10:22) - VN Bibliogrphay: Lolita & Pale Fire (fwd)

She deals with modernist narrative from Borges, Calvino,
and a number of others. But there is a substantial chapter


Item #729 (2 Oct 1995 08:47) - VN refs
story and--via the twelve letters--a spiritual guide. Comparisons with
Nabokov and Calvino are doubtless in order--those sunny fabulists and
dreamers of perfect dreams."


Item #835 (25 Nov 1995 15:31) - VNCOLLATION (fwd)
Conrad, D. H. Lawrence, Garcia Lorca, Rilke,
Stevens, Brecht, Nabokov, Lowell and Calvino have in
common? Answer: They all failed to win.


Comparisons to Nabokov and Calvino are doubtless in
order -- those sunny fabulists and dreamers of perfect


Item #839 (29 Nov 1995 09:23) - Nabokoviana
>From the LA Times Book Review, 11-26-95 of _Numbers in the Dark and Other
Stories_ by Italo Calvino, reviewed by Richard Eder:
"Does publishing the bits and pieces left behind after a great writer dies


Item #1095 (15 Apr 1996 14:24) - VN DIALOG:S1a
essay. But let me point out here that this was before I'd encountered
Calvino, or Borges, or Nooteboom or Queneau or that Irishman who wrote At
Swim Two Birds. . .


Item #1190 (30 Jul 1996 19:48) - VN Bibliography: Blot & Motte
contains chapters on Breton, Gombrowicz, Nabokov, Sarrazin, Perec, Harry
Mathews, Calvino, Belletteo, Reyes, and Eco is reviewed in The (London)
Times Literary Supplement of 26 July 1996, p. 25 by Ian Pindar. The


Item #2198 (22 Jun 1997 15:02) - Nabokov & the OULIPIANS (fwd)

- Italo Calvino was certainly one of the first critics to offer a
lucid analysis of Lolita. In an interview on "the future of the novel"

on a thematic pretext, etc.."
(My translation, cf. also Italo Calvino : Saggi, Mondadori, 1995, p.1524).
Other allusions to Nabokov can be found in the Mondadori edition : pp. 121


Item #3491 (16 Nov 1998 16:41) - Braffort on NABOKV-L
> OULIPO, a French circle devoted to the exploration of "potential"
> literature. The group has included Raymond Queneau, Italo Calvino, and
> Georges Perec (famous, inter alia, for his long novel _La Disparition_


Item #3493 (17 Nov 1998 11:23) - Re: Braffort on NABOKV-L (fwd)
> > OULIPO, a French circle devoted to the exploration of "potential"
> > literature. The group has included Raymond Queneau, Italo Calvino, and
> > Georges Perec (famous, inter alia, for his long novel _La Disparition_


Item #3494 (17 Nov 1998 11:34) - Re: Braffort on NABOKV-L (fwd)
While I admit that I have never read M. Braffort's published
work, I am an admirer of Calvino (another OULIPO member) and
find it strange that a colleague of Calvino's would also
criticize the use of the term "postmodern" and see it as yet


Item #3789 (15 Mar 1999 14:21) - Tallinn-Tartu Nabokov Conference Abstracts (fwd)

VLADIMIR NABOKOV AND ITALO CALVINO IN SEARCH OF THE "IDEAL" READER

The subject of this paper has been suggested by Italo Calvino's novel "In
on a Winter's Night a Traveler", whose hero is an "ideal" reader, that is


Item #3924 (14 Apr 1999 18:10) - Re: Granita
is infatuated with an elderly woman. I remember reading part of it in a
bookstore, but can't remember the author. For some reason Italo Calvino
or Umberto Eco come to mind. If anyone can help I would greatly


Item #3925 (14 Apr 1999 18:31) - It's Eco
> is infatuated with an elderly woman. I remember reading part of it in a
> bookstore, but can't remember the author. For some reason Italo Calvino
> or Umberto Eco come to mind. If anyone can help I would greatly


Item #3991 (25 Apr 1999 09:09) - A Birthday Tribute (fwd)
1998) which is my tribute to the celebrations. It is the third chapter of
Part IV entitled "Mon équilatère : Queneau, Nabokov, Calvino". I guess =
the


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