For the first time I realized those first lines in the poem are also a reflection to the life of Kinbote, which also seems to confirm he indeed committed suicide and hopes to live on through the work of a more talented man by being a part of it in his own unsavory way. The window pane is also a nod to how he spied through the windows. And he shadowed him (followed)
Excellent analysis! This helped clear up some very nebulous ideas I had grabbed from the text while reading but never fully grasped or pieced together the meaning of. Furthermore, I have realized something you did not mention and it is making me cry, the TRUE tragedy of Pale Fire. It is not Shade's murder nor Botkin's suicide. Or, well, it is, but it goes one step further. You pointed out that Shade pities Botkin and is nice to him. What got me thinking is WHY does Shade pity Botkin. I believe that Botkin reminds him of his daughter, Hazel. They are both outcasts, lonely, hated by society. The Hazel/Botkin connection may even have been mentioned somewhere in the text? I can't remember. All could find in the way of evidence of John's feelings is in note 894, his diffusing of the tension between Botkin and Emerald could be described as paternal. Anyway, the True Tragedy of this book is that Botkin, disappointed that the poem is not about his Zembla, does not realize that as Shade got to know him, he was reminded more and more of his daughter, and was inspired to write the poem, come to terms with Hazel's death, and make peace with life, the grand potato, etc. Shade wrote Pale Fire, not ABOUT Botkin, as poor Botkin was expecting, but BECAUSE of Botkin. Shade saw him as a reflection of Hazel. BOTKIN IS THE SHADOW OF THE WAXWING SLAIN. In the foreword, Botkin talks about watching Shade take in the world and turn it into poetry: "Here he is... that is his head... He is looking ... at a distant lake. I am looking at him. I am witnessing... John Shade perceiving and transforming the world...so as to produce... a line of verse." Shade was walking with Botkin, was looking at the place where his daughter died, was working the poetry in his head. The poetry of the novel is astounding. The false azure sky reflection kills the waxwing. The false self in his own reflection kills Botkin. The false reflection of Hazel in Botkin kills Shade. The false reflection of Goldsworth in Shade kills Jack Gray.
Wow this is amazing!! I think you're correct. Adding meat to the whole affair, two passages come to mind: the first being an index entry under "Kinbote, Charles, Dr.", which reads "his affinity with Hazel, 334, 348". I then went to see Kinbote's comments to those lines. In the first, 334, Kinbote likens himself to Hazel: just as she waited for a beau who never came, he waits for John Shade to come see him. But it's the second one that kills me, it goes like this: "lines 347-348 : She twisted words One of the examples her father gives is odd. I am quite sure it was I who one day, when we were discussing "mirror words," observed (and I recall the poet's expression of stupefaction) that 'spider' in reverse is 'redips,' and 'T.S. Eliot,' 'toilest.' But then it is also true that Hazel Shade resembled me in certain aspects." Reading it the first time, I dismissed this, lumping it in with other numerous examples of Kinbote's tendency to see himself in everything Shade wrote. I thought Kinbote was claiming false ownership over the reversed words. But Kinbote might very well be the author of these word reversals, after all his name is just such a play on Botkin. What if Shade did see Hazel in Kinbote, and that their shared love of wordplay reminded Shade, the father, of his daughter!
This! And all those ideas are connected to the numerous references to glassworks in Zembla. Glass is constantly mentioned through the novel, several times specifically linked to reflections
The 999 line poem with which the strange and unreliable narrator leads us through his dreamlike fantasy against the blunt forensic fact of the poet John Shade, who was murdered in 1959.
Just finished the book today and I am so grateful that this video exists. Like you mentioned, I just skimmed the index and didn't think much about it. Thank you for the video; it was both entertaining and eye opening.
This is a great study. I read the book last year and it was really interesting to watch this. I believe the Russian immigrant theme could be somewhat taken from Nabokov's own life. There's also probably something to the fact that Zembla is a monarchy that got taken over by communists, forcing the main character to run. Nabokov got really screwed over by the October Revolution and the way Kinbote/Botkin describes Gradus (especially the "Mere springs and coils..." paragraph) felt like a reflection of his thoughts. I spent hours on the nabokovian reading about different interpretations, but this is the first instance of one so consistent and concrete. The fact that this channel is so underrated is a war crime, this is an absolute gem
Reading it on mini pad is the best! Can search names, words, definitions and I can mark up pages with scribble, highlights and notes. It’s quite the Meta experience doing exactly what Kinbote that nutcase is also doing.
I don't have much to say but I wanted to commend you for your excellent work here. Rarely do I finish a video essay and say, out loud, 'Holy shit.' Not to toot my own horn or anything, but upon writing my review of this book for Goodreads, I came to realize how similar it was, both structurally and thematically, to House of Leaves, and was totally stoked when you pointed that out too. This truly might be one of the best video essays I've ever seen, especially with all the art and the music being by just you two. Just stellar. Also, that song is a bop and a half. Truly haunting.
Just finished the book, and this video really gave me some extremely valuable insight into what this work really encompasses. Super explanative and well edited too.
Ghosts in Pale Fire are actually a rabbit hole at least as deep as the Botkin one and in my opinion make all the themes of mirrors, reflections, suicide, the afterlife, authority and authorship come together beautifully. Once you add up the details in the commentary (especially those that are concerned with mirrorings), a picture emerges of Shade finishing his work as a ghost from the afterlife by haunting Kinbote's story and aiding his own death by guiding Gradus (within the fiction of Kinbote), thus becoming the waxwing that crashed into his own reflection and mirroring his daughter's suicide. Just as Kinbote was initially disappointed that the poem wasn't about Zembla but later claimed to have found bits of Zembla in it, the reader is initially jarred and disappointed that the commentary ignores the poem completely, but then realizes there is bits of Shade in Zembla. I won't list all the evidence I've found for this theory, but I think Brian Boyd's The Magic of Artistic Discovery should cover most of it, though I haven't read it yet. It'd make for a cool sequel to this video.
Great Essay! The index for the crown jewels looks like a dead end, but there actually is a satisfying solution that ties in a lot of seemingly underdeveloped parts of the Zembla narrative. Pay close attention to the formatting of each entry
I have not been able to stop talking about this book since I started reading it and this video is amazing! I am so happy that there are people passionate enough to spend this much time making an youtube analysis on such a nice subject as they would on a good video game or something else. I loved the part about how pale fire is an interactive experience. I can't express enough how happy I am that people can have as much fun with this older and less accessible story! Video also cleared my questions and I can't wait so see where this channel will go in the future!
That was so fucking good. Throughout the video when you brought up certain sentences I remembered that I had felt a pang of confusion or unease when I encountered them but moved on without drawing any connections (such as the faculty member saying I thought your name came from Botkin and Botkin as a job type surname). How much of this was your analysis and how much was from the essay you mentioned? Regardless, everything in this was so well done. Thank you so much. Must say I feel a little cheated that the (Penguin!) Kindle version didn’t have the index. Thanks again and very excited to follow this channel onwards.
Hi George. Thanks for your lovely comment - glad you enjoyed! The Mary McCarthy essay was the first to state the idea that Kinbote is really a Russian named Botkin, but we had to find most of the textual evidence to back up that claim ourselves. And we came up with most of the analyses/thoughts featured in Parts 3 and 4 entirely on our own, before reading other interpretations out of interest. Don't worry, we are hoping we might make more videos on this channel in future! We just need to find the right topic or book first. Appreciate your enthusiastic support (and best of luck with your own channel).
@@thewaxwingcollective5859 Yes!!! Make more!!! Also, as a suggestion, what I want to see you make is: a video showing how the novel Pale Fire influence/inspired the plot of Blade Runner 2049. I have looked around for a good analysis of Blade Runner 2049 and I haven't found a decent one, and there are some glaring parallels between these two stories. A lot of movies are inspired by books, and I think its not fair to both genres if that wasn't better explored. Also, I think people would love to see that, like and subscribe.
Maybe I should mention that Pale Fire is featured in the beginning of Blade Runner 2049 (picked up off a coffee table by Ana de Armas and held perfectly in frame), so it's clear the Director wanted the audience to see the similarities, but no one talks about it.
Great analysis! I just thought that it would be interesting to note the mention of mammoths (king-bot, maggot of extinct fly that once bred in mammoths and is thought to have hastened their phylogenetic end) in the Botkin’s index entry, as, although the hypothesis is outdated today, Novaya Zemlya (aka "Zembla") was long thought to be the last refuge where woolly mammoths survived.
What an amazing video essay. Absolutely loved the explanation and the pictures. Also the quote drops to back information were just fantastic. Whoever created the song at the end also deserves massive kudos.
I finished Pale Fire this week, and oh my gosh, this video has shed so much light on my reading! I totally missed the Botkin references (happy to admit I neglected the index), I did consider that Kinbote might be a creation of John shade, but the Prof Botkin solution seems a lot tidier/meatier. Gonna have to pick it back up and give it another going through- thanks so much for the analysis! Is the song at the end something you wrote? It’s fab!
We are very happy to hear that! Thank you for watching. Would definitely recommend reading through the index, there are a lot of cool fun details in there that we didn't fully discuss in the video. And yes, the song is ours - Matthew gets full credit for the lyrics! - S
Wonderful video, you do the book a lot of justice and that little nod to alternative story telling and how this book is a prime example of it really wasn't expected but it was appreciated!
Please please for the love of all that is holy please do something anything please I am begging you The quality of this video is so great I felt compelled to subscribe You have by now received several comments saying you did a phenomenal job I don't care what you choose to do, just please, please, do more I LOVE this
Superb. The best analysis I’ve ever read or viewed about my favourite novel. So good that this is the first and probably the only comment I’ve ever made on RUclips. Absolutely wonderful!
I admit that the "intentional murder" of Shade by Gradus, who was prosecuted by Goldsmith, got past me. I thought that it was a botched assassination as Gradus was incapable, but your analysis of Botkin living in Judge Goldsmith's house makes sense especially with the quotation that Gradus actually knew the place. Thanks!
This is probably my favourite book, ever. You guys made it an even more rich post-read experience and I can't thank you enough! Hope you're both doing well and can't wait for more content ;)
What an amazing video. Seems to have come perfectly in time for me to have finished reading Pale Fire! So very glad you guys made this and made it so entertaining, thorough and creative. Would love to see more. Keep it up.
Fantastic. Thank you very much. Your video opened my eyes to some more intricate details, like the real identity of Gradus. Meta-analysis also was perfectly on point. I am happy you made this book more accessible to some people
That's the perfect commentary for RUclips. Not superficial while not being too lengthy. I would love to see your review of other Nabokov's books like The Real Life of Sebastian Knight / Ada, or Ardor: A Family Chronicle.
My wife has been watching the show You lately and when reading through the book, I really thought Kinbote was going to end up killing Shade. That everything about the revolutionaries was just him justifying it. I thought there were a lot of similarities between Kinbote and the main character from You. They are both just full of delusions about who they are and their relationship with the other person.
Casually drops somes of the best literally analysis out there, refuses to elaborate, leaves. What did they mean by this? Are they waiting for blade runner 3????
This is an extraordinary video with incredible thoughtfulness, care and concern. You picked a pretty niche topic so the reach will be limited, but it deserves accolades.
I notice variation between the English text and the french translation. Note 579 is in 550 in French. Note 999 is 1000. Nabokov - who used to review the French translations of his works - asked for those changes, amendments, deleted parts, etc. Reading those two versions side by side feels like yet another level in that novel (and makes the reader feels like he is a character in the novel :))
This is such a brilliant videa, it really explained so much that I could not pick up in my one read of pale fire. I just have one question... What did you think of the alternative lines in the draft that Kinbote presents, that have more explicit allusions to Zembla? Do you think he made those up or do you think Shade wrote those maybe just to humour Kinbote?
Thank you!!. I am currently reading this and was losing my mind over Zembla. I started doubting my own level of intellect lmaooo. Turns out Kinbote really sucks and I'm not surprised by this move of Nabokov's. He likes to play with the reader this way.
This is neat. This book basically teaches you to pay close attention to the cross-referencing of biographical snippets about the writer presenting a piece of information against the biographical snippets of his involvement in larger social networks and world events, all without spelling out that said writer has a deceitful agenda for the information he's presenting you with (such lack of guidance is crucial to the effect). The video says as much, but I find it amusing that it also completely leaves Nabokov out of the spotlight, as if it's irrelevant where he's coming from with this book of his.
You're very kind, thank you. Glad you enjoyed! We have a SoundCloud where you can find the song: m.soundcloud.com/the-waxwing-collective. We plan to upload more songs/videos on there and this channel in the future.
@@thewaxwingcollective5859 That's wonderful to hear because the worst part of my morning, thus far, was right after I finished your video and typed the above question and then greedily clicked onto "The Waxwing Collective" to explore which of your videos I would be watching next. Utter shock and horror. But thanks for the link. What a great voice, melody, lyrics and tune. Thanks for making the video, and good luck on whatever is next!
For the first time I realized those first lines in the poem are also a reflection to the life of Kinbote, which also seems to confirm he indeed committed suicide and hopes to live on through the work of a more talented man by being a part of it in his own unsavory way. The window pane is also a nod to how he spied through the windows. And he shadowed him (followed)
Two things make this video superb: Kinbote being depicted as a wojack and that ending song. The analysis is all right too, I guess.
....why is this your only video???? This is precisely what i need from youtube. DO MORE!!
I second this
Excellent analysis! This helped clear up some very nebulous ideas I had grabbed from the text while reading but never fully grasped or pieced together the meaning of. Furthermore, I have realized something you did not mention and it is making me cry, the TRUE tragedy of Pale Fire. It is not Shade's murder nor Botkin's suicide. Or, well, it is, but it goes one step further.
You pointed out that Shade pities Botkin and is nice to him. What got me thinking is WHY does Shade pity Botkin. I believe that Botkin reminds him of his daughter, Hazel. They are both outcasts, lonely, hated by society. The Hazel/Botkin connection may even have been mentioned somewhere in the text? I can't remember. All could find in the way of evidence of John's feelings is in note 894, his diffusing of the tension between Botkin and Emerald could be described as paternal. Anyway, the True Tragedy of this book is that Botkin, disappointed that the poem is not about his Zembla, does not realize that as Shade got to know him, he was reminded more and more of his daughter, and was inspired to write the poem, come to terms with Hazel's death, and make peace with life, the grand potato, etc.
Shade wrote Pale Fire, not ABOUT Botkin, as poor Botkin was expecting, but BECAUSE of Botkin. Shade saw him as a reflection of Hazel. BOTKIN IS THE SHADOW OF THE WAXWING SLAIN.
In the foreword, Botkin talks about watching Shade take in the world and turn it into poetry: "Here he is... that is his head... He is looking ... at a distant lake. I am looking at him. I am witnessing... John Shade perceiving and transforming the world...so as to produce... a line of verse." Shade was walking with Botkin, was looking at the place where his daughter died, was working the poetry in his head.
The poetry of the novel is astounding. The false azure sky reflection kills the waxwing. The false self in his own reflection kills Botkin. The false reflection of Hazel in Botkin kills Shade. The false reflection of Goldsworth in Shade kills Jack Gray.
Wow this is amazing!! I think you're correct. Adding meat to the whole affair, two passages come to mind: the first being an index entry under "Kinbote, Charles, Dr.", which reads "his affinity with Hazel, 334, 348". I then went to see Kinbote's comments to those lines. In the first, 334, Kinbote likens himself to Hazel: just as she waited for a beau who never came, he waits for John Shade to come see him. But it's the second one that kills me, it goes like this:
"lines 347-348 : She twisted words
One of the examples her father gives is odd. I am quite sure it was I who one day, when we were discussing "mirror words," observed (and I recall the poet's expression of stupefaction) that 'spider' in reverse is 'redips,' and 'T.S. Eliot,' 'toilest.' But then it is also true that Hazel Shade resembled me in certain aspects."
Reading it the first time, I dismissed this, lumping it in with other numerous examples of Kinbote's tendency to see himself in everything Shade wrote. I thought Kinbote was claiming false ownership over the reversed words. But Kinbote might very well be the author of these word reversals, after all his name is just such a play on Botkin. What if Shade did see Hazel in Kinbote, and that their shared love of wordplay reminded Shade, the father, of his daughter!
Some very interesting thoughts. Your perspicuity is much appreciated.
This! And all those ideas are connected to the numerous references to glassworks in Zembla. Glass is constantly mentioned through the novel, several times specifically linked to reflections
The unfinished index is so haunting
The 999 line poem with which the strange and unreliable narrator leads us through his dreamlike fantasy against the blunt forensic fact of the poet John Shade, who was murdered in 1959.
Just finished the book today and I am so grateful that this video exists. Like you mentioned, I just skimmed the index and didn't think much about it. Thank you for the video; it was both entertaining and eye opening.
The Scottish accent is beautiful. Great first video
Dayum. This is so good! Ada or Ardor next would be a gift.
I couldn’t agree more. Ada or Ardor is my favorite Nabokov novel (and Pale Fire is second).
An absolutely phenomenal video.
This is a great study. I read the book last year and it was really interesting to watch this. I believe the Russian immigrant theme could be somewhat taken from Nabokov's own life. There's also probably something to the fact that Zembla is a monarchy that got taken over by communists, forcing the main character to run. Nabokov got really screwed over by the October Revolution and the way Kinbote/Botkin describes Gradus (especially the "Mere springs and coils..." paragraph) felt like a reflection of his thoughts. I spent hours on the nabokovian reading about different interpretations, but this is the first instance of one so consistent and concrete. The fact that this channel is so underrated is a war crime, this is an absolute gem
Reading it on mini pad is the best! Can search names, words, definitions and I can mark up pages with scribble, highlights and notes. It’s quite the Meta experience doing exactly what Kinbote that nutcase is also doing.
This is one of the best video easey I've seen about litterateur.
I don't have much to say but I wanted to commend you for your excellent work here. Rarely do I finish a video essay and say, out loud, 'Holy shit.'
Not to toot my own horn or anything, but upon writing my review of this book for Goodreads, I came to realize how similar it was, both structurally and thematically, to House of Leaves, and was totally stoked when you pointed that out too. This truly might be one of the best video essays I've ever seen, especially with all the art and the music being by just you two. Just stellar.
Also, that song is a bop and a half. Truly haunting.
so cool. I don 't understand why there are so few views . Thank you for the analysis
Just finished the book, and this video really gave me some extremely valuable insight into what this work really encompasses. Super explanative and well edited too.
Ghosts in Pale Fire are actually a rabbit hole at least as deep as the Botkin one and in my opinion make all the themes of mirrors, reflections, suicide, the afterlife, authority and authorship come together beautifully. Once you add up the details in the commentary (especially those that are concerned with mirrorings), a picture emerges of Shade finishing his work as a ghost from the afterlife by haunting Kinbote's story and aiding his own death by guiding Gradus (within the fiction of Kinbote), thus becoming the waxwing that crashed into his own reflection and mirroring his daughter's suicide. Just as Kinbote was initially disappointed that the poem wasn't about Zembla but later claimed to have found bits of Zembla in it, the reader is initially jarred and disappointed that the commentary ignores the poem completely, but then realizes there is bits of Shade in Zembla.
I won't list all the evidence I've found for this theory, but I think Brian Boyd's The Magic of Artistic Discovery should cover most of it, though I haven't read it yet. It'd make for a cool sequel to this video.
Great Essay! The index for the crown jewels looks like a dead end, but there actually is a satisfying solution that ties in a lot of seemingly underdeveloped parts of the Zembla narrative. Pay close attention to the formatting of each entry
This is a wonderful video about a fantastic novel. Really excited for this channel to grow!
I have not been able to stop talking about this book since I started reading it and this video is amazing! I am so happy that there are people passionate enough to spend this much time making an youtube analysis on such a nice subject as they would on a good video game or something else.
I loved the part about how pale fire is an interactive experience. I can't express enough how happy I am that people can have as much fun with this older and less accessible story!
Video also cleared my questions and I can't wait so see where this channel will go in the future!
THIS ROCKS!!!!!!!
Superb. I just finished Pale Fire and can't stop thinking about it. This opened up so many new perspectives that I hadn't considered.
Incredible analysis, even better song
Legend! Really enjoy how you step by step solve the puzzle of Pale Fire and how it turned out to be a tragic story.
That was so fucking good. Throughout the video when you brought up certain sentences I remembered that I had felt a pang of confusion or unease when I encountered them but moved on without drawing any connections (such as the faculty member saying I thought your name came from Botkin and Botkin as a job type surname). How much of this was your analysis and how much was from the essay you mentioned? Regardless, everything in this was so well done. Thank you so much. Must say I feel a little cheated that the (Penguin!) Kindle version didn’t have the index. Thanks again and very excited to follow this channel onwards.
Waxwing in your name makes me fear you only intend to do this video. I hope that’s not the case.
Hi George. Thanks for your lovely comment - glad you enjoyed! The Mary McCarthy essay was the first to state the idea that Kinbote is really a Russian named Botkin, but we had to find most of the textual evidence to back up that claim ourselves. And we came up with most of the analyses/thoughts featured in Parts 3 and 4 entirely on our own, before reading other interpretations out of interest.
Don't worry, we are hoping we might make more videos on this channel in future! We just need to find the right topic or book first. Appreciate your enthusiastic support (and best of luck with your own channel).
@@thewaxwingcollective5859 Yes!!! Make more!!!
Also, as a suggestion, what I want to see you make is: a video showing how the novel Pale Fire influence/inspired the plot of Blade Runner 2049. I have looked around for a good analysis of Blade Runner 2049 and I haven't found a decent one, and there are some glaring parallels between these two stories.
A lot of movies are inspired by books, and I think its not fair to both genres if that wasn't better explored. Also, I think people would love to see that, like and subscribe.
Maybe I should mention that Pale Fire is featured in the beginning of Blade Runner 2049 (picked up off a coffee table by Ana de Armas and held perfectly in frame), so it's clear the Director wanted the audience to see the similarities, but no one talks about it.
@@HiAlphaPuppy Someone noticed. Check Fallopium Films Blade runner 2049.
Great analysis! I just thought that it would be interesting to note the mention of mammoths (king-bot, maggot of extinct fly that once bred in mammoths and is thought to have hastened their phylogenetic end) in the Botkin’s index entry, as, although the hypothesis is outdated today, Novaya Zemlya (aka "Zembla") was long thought to be the last refuge where woolly mammoths survived.
What an amazing video essay. Absolutely loved the explanation and the pictures. Also the quote drops to back information were just fantastic. Whoever created the song at the end also deserves massive kudos.
A lot of great work was put into this video. Thank you for this. PLEASE MAKE MORE!
Very impressive video! I so hope you make more of them.
"Dear Jesus, do something."
They went there and did. Y'all are fantastic. Please make more videos!
I finished Pale Fire this week, and oh my gosh, this video has shed so much light on my reading! I totally missed the Botkin references (happy to admit I neglected the index), I did consider that Kinbote might be a creation of John shade, but the Prof Botkin solution seems a lot tidier/meatier.
Gonna have to pick it back up and give it another going through- thanks so much for the analysis!
Is the song at the end something you wrote? It’s fab!
We are very happy to hear that! Thank you for watching. Would definitely recommend reading through the index, there are a lot of cool fun details in there that we didn't fully discuss in the video. And yes, the song is ours - Matthew gets full credit for the lyrics!
- S
Wonderful video, you do the book a lot of justice and that little nod to alternative story telling and how this book is a prime example of it really wasn't expected but it was appreciated!
Thank you for making this
Please please for the love of all that is holy please do something anything please I am begging you
The quality of this video is so great I felt compelled to subscribe
You have by now received several comments saying you did a phenomenal job
I don't care what you choose to do, just please, please, do more
I LOVE this
Superb. The best analysis I’ve ever read or viewed about my favourite novel. So good that this is the first and probably the only comment I’ve ever made on RUclips. Absolutely wonderful!
This was a brilliant analysis and so charmingly and engagingly delivered. Magnificent work!
This is incredible. Please, please do more!
What a beautiful video for a masterpiece. Please continue, your efforts are not as hidden as the text the video examines.
Excellent! I love this book, and I've never found a good video on it until today. Thanks a lot. I hope you will continue running this channel!
you two work very well off of each other, very impressed with this work.
I really enjoyed this. Thank you!
I admit that the "intentional murder" of Shade by Gradus, who was prosecuted by Goldsmith, got past me. I thought that it was a botched assassination as Gradus was incapable, but your analysis of Botkin living in Judge Goldsmith's house makes sense especially with the quotation that Gradus actually knew the place. Thanks!
This is probably my favourite book, ever. You guys made it an even more rich post-read experience and I can't thank you enough! Hope you're both doing well and can't wait for more content ;)
What an amazing video. Seems to have come perfectly in time for me to have finished reading Pale Fire! So very glad you guys made this and made it so entertaining, thorough and creative. Would love to see more. Keep it up.
That was simply amazing. Thank you very much
Fantastic. Thank you very much. Your video opened my eyes to some more intricate details, like the real identity of Gradus. Meta-analysis also was perfectly on point. I am happy you made this book more accessible to some people
That's the perfect commentary for RUclips. Not superficial while not being too lengthy. I would love to see your review of other Nabokov's books like The Real Life of Sebastian Knight / Ada, or Ardor: A Family Chronicle.
I love this format of video essay, please make more !
I really appreciate this! Thank you!!
Good video, hope you make more. I’m studying this for quiz bowl
This is a deep analysis. Respect to all involved for deconstructing this. You have invested a lot of time in this and it shows. Much appreciated.
This is what the internet is supposed to be for! THANK YOU!
This was an amazing analysis. Thank you so much for this
A lot of great work in this video! can’t wait for more.
Wow!!! Such an incredible video, really took me on a journey and recontextualized my reading of the book. I can't wait to see what you guys do next
Excellent video, can’t wait to see how this channel continues to emerge and grow.
Amazing video! Please keep making videos!
The song in the end. *Bozhe moy! Bozhe moy!*
Amazing! thanks for all the effort you put in. Really hope you end up covering some more Nabokov. Would love to see something on Ada
wait why is this such a good analysis
Thank you so much! Having english as a second language, I found this much more difficult than Lolita. Didn't stop Nabokov though : )
Speak, Kimbolt!
What an amazing video! Very well done both
Amazing video. I wish all the success to your project! :)
Thank you sooo much. Great vid. Great novel.
Thank you so much for sharing this!
What a wonderful job you guys did with this video! Thank you for putting this all together and sharing
The video is great, but the saxophone made my day
My wife has been watching the show You lately and when reading through the book, I really thought Kinbote was going to end up killing Shade. That everything about the revolutionaries was just him justifying it. I thought there were a lot of similarities between Kinbote and the main character from You. They are both just full of delusions about who they are and their relationship with the other person.
Casually drops somes of the best literally analysis out there, refuses to elaborate, leaves.
What did they mean by this? Are they waiting for blade runner 3????
I really enjoyed this video! Can't wait for what you guys have been up to since this came out.
This is so well done. Please make more.
This was an amazing video, hopefully you guys continue to make more
still waiting if you ever want to :)
This is an extraordinary video with incredible thoughtfulness, care and concern. You picked a pretty niche topic so the reach will be limited, but it deserves accolades.
You put a lot of work into this!! You deserve to see the fruits of your labor. Thank you for everything.
Lovely video, and well done. Excited to se what else you get up to.
I notice variation between the English text and the french translation. Note 579 is in 550 in French. Note 999 is 1000. Nabokov - who used to review the French translations of his works - asked for those changes, amendments, deleted parts, etc. Reading those two versions side by side feels like yet another level in that novel (and makes the reader feels like he is a character in the novel :))
I just finished this last week this video was recommended to me at the perfect moment
Greetings from Auckland. Loved this video. Subscribed.
Thank you so much for this video! Expertly done. Cheers!
Such a amazing video. Hope you post more!
Thanks for the video
This is such a brilliant videa, it really explained so much that I could not pick up in my one read of pale fire. I just have one question... What did you think of the alternative lines in the draft that Kinbote presents, that have more explicit allusions to Zembla? Do you think he made those up or do you think Shade wrote those maybe just to humour Kinbote?
Great work!
Great Job!
It’s like analog horror before analog horror in the written word! Lovely thank you!! I just finished Pale Fire and love this analysis. ❤
This book is shown on the coffee table of the protagonist in Blade Runner 2049
And indeed the poem is quoted in the "calibration" sequences: "cells interlinked within cells interlinked".
Excellent work - chapeau!
Amazing! Thank you.
wow @ the song at the end!!
Cool video, L&S.
Thank you!!. I am currently reading this and was losing my mind over Zembla. I started doubting my own level of intellect lmaooo. Turns out Kinbote really sucks and I'm not surprised by this move of Nabokov's. He likes to play with the reader this way.
This is neat. This book basically teaches you to pay close attention to the cross-referencing of biographical snippets about the writer presenting a piece of information against the biographical snippets of his involvement in larger social networks and world events, all without spelling out that said writer has a deceitful agenda for the information he's presenting you with (such lack of guidance is crucial to the effect). The video says as much, but I find it amusing that it also completely leaves Nabokov out of the spotlight, as if it's irrelevant where he's coming from with this book of his.
I think this channel is gonna get me into literature. Oh no
will you do another nabokov novel next?
@49:35 i really enjoy this song. What style of music would you call this? I'd like to find more music like it.
Thanks! Glad you liked it. It’s loosely inspired by Russian/Slavic folk music but also with a bit of Scottish influence :-)
The writer in masterful English, Vladimir Nabokov ( 1899 - 1977 ). He also wrote many other books.
Pale Fire also contains an in-joke reference to "hurricane lolita", you get it or you don't.
Amazing
I'm interested in how this book relates to Blade Runner 2049. I can't believe they're leading me to decipher literature.
Brilliant :)
How do I constantly listen to that little mastpiece that ends the video?
You're very kind, thank you. Glad you enjoyed! We have a SoundCloud where you can find the song: m.soundcloud.com/the-waxwing-collective.
We plan to upload more songs/videos on there and this channel in the future.
@@thewaxwingcollective5859
That's wonderful to hear because the worst part of my morning, thus far, was right after I finished your video and typed the above question and then greedily clicked onto "The Waxwing Collective" to explore which of your videos I would be watching next. Utter shock and horror.
But thanks for the link. What a great voice, melody, lyrics and tune. Thanks for making the video, and good luck on whatever is next!