An afterthought concerning the mention of "Dostoevski, author of The Double, etc." in
the excerpt from Speak, Memory quoted in my previous post:
Demonia or Antiterra (the planet on which Ada is set)
is a double of Earth.
The mock execution of Dostoevski (who was imprisoned in the
Peter-and-Paul Fortress for eight months) took place on January 3,
1850 (New Style). January 3 is Lucette's birthday. On the other hand, the
mysterious L disaster happened on Antiterra in the beau milieu of the
19th century (1.3).
Dostoevsky was arrested on April 23, 1849 (Old Style). The
Double (1848) was the second tale of Dostoevsky who had made his début
with Bednye Lyudi ("Poor Folks," 1846), an epistolary novel. One of the
characters in Bednye Lyudi is Tereza (a housemaid who acts as a
postman between the two correspondents who live in a big apartment house
with their windows facing each other across the courtyard). Theresa is
a character in Van's début
novel Letters from Terra, a girl who sends messages from Terra to
Professor Sig Leymanski and then flies over to him (2.2). On the other
hand, the Cyrillic counterpart of Roman L (cf. L disaster) was called
lyudi in the old Russian alphabet.
Antiterra and Earth's twin planet visited by the hero and
narrator in Dostoevsky's story "The Dream of a Ridiculous Man" (1877) after he
committed suicide in his dream seem to be one and the same planet.
Correction of a slip of finger in my previous post: saklya, not "lyaska," is a Caucasian
mountain hut. The word is used by Pushkin and Lermontov in their Caucasian poems
and in "A Hero of our Time," and by Tolstoy in "Haji Murat." Also, the
word Fortress is missing in my quote from Speak,
Memory. Insert it after the
Peter-and-Paul.
Alexey Sklyarenko