Nabokov
fans will be disappointed by narrator Stefan Rudnicki's stiff, staid
performance in this audio version of the author's 13th novel. Told in a
series of vignettes, the story follows Russian immigrant and professor
Timofey Pavlovich Pnin as he boards the wrong train on his way to
deliver a lecture, loses his luggage, struggles with the English
language, hunts for living quarters, deals with his ex-wife, and throws a
faculty party. Rudnicki's narration is clear and steady, but fails to
capture the playfulness of Nabokov's prose and the humor of the text.
Instead, Rudnicki's tone is variously stiff, needlessly booming, or
monotone. He does, however, provide a wide range of voices for the cast
of characters. His rendition of the title character-which sounds like a
hybrid of Sacha Baron Cohen's Borat and Soviet comedian Yakov
Smirnoff-is dynamic and entertaining. Listeners will be left wishing
Rudnicki had infused more of his narration with those qualities. (Nov.)
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