Asides

Department of no surprises

By May 27, 2010No Comments

To T.C.

Because Halloween week­end is very nearly upon us, National Review Online con­trib­ut­or John J. Miller recom­mends a few of his pre­ferred ghost stor­ies, one of them being Nabokov’s “The Vane Sisters.” Quoth Miller:  “The end­ing is fiendishly clev­er. It’s also a trick. I missed it com­pletely and dis­covered its true mean­ing by read­ing around the inter­webs.” Yeah, I bet he did. One rather feels like suck­ing one’s gums a bit before launch­ing into a diatribe of what it was like to read Nabokov before there were any inter­webs, non?

Later on Miller’s list: A yarn by Andrew Klavan. Lunch at Tour d’Argent, din­ner at KFC.

No Comments

  • bill says:

    I have to read “The Vane Sisters”. I just haven’t got­ten around to many of his short stor­ies yet. I have LAUGHTER IN THE DARK pegged as the next VN nov­el I read, and that one’s loom­ing. I’m still high off of read­ing DESPAIR earli­er this year.

  • Brian says:

    Bill, if you have not yet read The Real Life of Sebastian Knight, I would sug­gest it next in place of Laughter in the Dark. The lat­ter is fine, but the former is a real beaut.

  • Mark Slutsky says:

    The short stor­ies are such gems. “A Visit to a Museum.” “An Affair of Honour.” (incred­ible) “Signs and Symbols.” “Cloud, Castle, Lake.” And so on.

  • bill says:

    Brian, I have read SEBASTIAN KNIGHT, but it’s been so long, and, to my chag­rin, I barely remem­ber it. The only thing I can remem­ber at all is a line about people who read mys­tery nov­els hav­ing pure souls. But I do know I liked it a lot, and it’s marked for a re-read. I have to get through some Nabokov I’ve nev­er cracked yet, though.
    PS – What would it take, I won­der, to turn this thread into one about favor­ite hor­ror stories?

  • bill says:

    I read “The Vane Sisters” last night, and I’m not sure what Miller did­n’t get. Who reads a ghost story in which an omin­ous ref­er­ence is made to anoth­er short story whose last para­graph was an acrostic and does­n’t think “Oh, I’m so doing that out when I fin­ish THIS story.”

  • Pete Segall says:

    I’m kind of impressed that Miller has seem­ingly got his hands on a early edi­tion of Tyrants Destroyed since the Vintage Collected Stories includes an author’s note on “The Vane Sisters” /that explains what the last para­graph says/.

  • Elizabeth says:

    Because Halloween week­end is very nearly upon us” made me laugh out loud.