“I wish I could breathe a Nabokovian air. I wish I could have the Olympian freedom of sensibility that disdains, in his autobiography, to give the Russian Revolution more than a passing mention, as if such common events did not have the power to wreak fundamental changes in his own life, or as if it were vulgar, tactless, to dwell on something so brutishly, so crudely collective. I wish I could define myself -a s Nabokov defines both himself and his characters - by the telling detail, as preference for months over lozenges, an awkwardness at cricket, a tendency to lose floes or umbrellas. I wish I could live in a world of prismatic reflections, carefully distinguished colours of sunsets and English scarves, synthetic repetitions and reiterative surprises - a world in which even a reddened nostril can be rendered as a delicious hue rather than a symptom of a discomfiting common cold. I wish I could attain such a world because in part that is our most real, and most loved world - the world of utterly individual sensibility, untrampled by history, or horrid intrusions of social circumstance. Oh ye, I think the Nabokovian world is lighted, lightened, and enlightened by the most precise affection. Such affection is unsentimental because it is free and because it attaches to free objects. It can notice what is adorable (or odious, for that matter), rather than what is formed and deformed by larger forces. Characters, in Nabokov's fiction, being perfectly themselves, attain the graced amorality of aesthetic objects.”
Quote by Eva Hoffman
Work
Lost In Translation: A Life in a New Language
This book delves into the personal journey of someone who has embraced a new language, examining the emotional and intellectual hurdles faced in the process. It offers insights into the complexities of language acquisition and the profound impact it can have on one's sense of identity and belonging. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: The Blood of Others
“No one my age had ever wanted to be both man and woman-with both men and women.”
Source: Call Me by Your Name
Source: Lost In Translation: A Life in a New Language
Source: Just Like Family
Source: What Is Not Yours Is Not Yours
“You feel more like home to me than any place I've ever been.”
Source: Once Upon an Ever After
