According to this deranged annotator, he
had urged Shade to write about his own homeland--the northern kingdom
of Zembla. It soon becomes clear that this fabulous locale may well
be a figment of Kinbote's colorfully cracked, prismatic imagination.
Meanwhile, he manages to twist the poem into an account of Zembla's
King Charles--whom he believes himself to be--and the monarch's eventual assassination by the revolutionary Jakob Gradus.
In
the course of this dizzying narrative, shots are indeed fired. But
it's Shade who takes the hit, enabling Kinbote to steal the dead
poet's manuscript and set about annotating it. Is that perfectly clear?
By now it should be obvious that Pale Fire is not only a
whodunit but a who-wrote-it. There isn't, of course, a single solution.
But Nabokov's best biographer, Brian Boyd, has come up with an
ingenious suggestion: he argues that Shade is actually guiding
Kinbote's mad hand from beyond the grave, nudging him into completing
what he'd intended to be a 1,000-line poem. Read this magical,
melancholic mystery and see if you agree. --Tim Appelo Vladimir Nabokov Pale Fire free download pdf english version
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