----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, August 14, 2005 10:08 AM
Subject: FW: VN Bib:Boris Averin. Dar Mnemoziny) Sergey Davydov
(Teksty-Matreshki VNa)
DEAR
DON,
BY THE
WAY, AT LEAST THE FOLLOWING ARE BLATANT INFRINGEMENTS: NOS. 3 AND 4;
POSSIBLY OTHERS. NO.3, IN PARTICULAR, IS AN ILLEGAL AND SPURIOUS
SYMPOSIUM/IL'YIN RIP-OFF OF FATHER'S DRUGIE BEREGA THAT WILL SOON BE
REMOVED FROM SALE.
BEST
REGARDS,
-----Original Message-----
From:
Vladimir Nabokov Forum [mailto:NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU] On Behalf Of
D. Barton Johnson
Sent: Saturday, August 13, 2005 1:14
PM
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Subject: VN
Bib:Boris Averin. Dar Mnemoziny) Sergey Davydov (Teksty-Matreshki
VNa)
Your editor learned of several recent
books on Nabokov during my St. Petersburg stay.
1. Most important is Boris Averin's "DAR
MNEMOZINY. romany Nabokova v kontekste russkoi avtobiograficheskoi
tradititsii"." Sankt-Peterburg: Amfora, 2003. VN's memoirs are examined in the
light of earlier autobiographical writings, especially those of Belyi, Vyascheslav Ivanov, &
Bunin.
2. Sergey Davydov's "TEKSTY-Matreshki Vladimira
Nabokova." This is a revised issue of a book issued in Munich in 1982 and is the
"first Russian-language mongraph on Nabokov." Sankt-Peterburg: Kirtsideli,
2004.
3, Vladimir Nabokov. "Drugie Berega (s
parallel'noi publikatsiei angliisskoi versii." Moskva: Zakharov,
2003.
This is a very useful volume for scholars,
especially those who squander hours crosschecking the first English
version of VN's memoir (Conclusive Evidence) against the expanded Russian
translation (Drugie berega). This very handsome little volume gives the original
English and the expanded Russian texts side-by-side making comparisions of the
two versions most convenient.
4. The Saint-Petersburg
publisher Azbuka-Klassika has put out a handy new and inexpensive
edition of VN's "Drugie berega" that includes a handful of autobiographically
pertinent stories & poems. Best of all are the extensive
commentaries/annotations by L.F. Klimenko & A.O. Filimonov. Introductory
essay by Boris Averin.