- Published: 29 August 2011
- ISBN: 9780141963891
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 256
The Enchanter
Nabokov and Happiness
- Published: 29 August 2011
- ISBN: 9780141963891
- Imprint: Penguin eBooks
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 256
'Happiness writes white - it doesn't show up on the page,' said Henri de Montherlant. This is an aphorism that sounds true but isn't, and the work of Vladimir Nabokov, as Lila Azam Zanganeh so lightly and elegantly shows us, is its great disproof. Her book is a joyful study of the joy that inspired all of Nabokov's art. A beautiful little book which, flitting here and there like the great man's beloved butterflies, delightfully succeeds in netting the butterfly hunter.
Salman Rushdie
A lucid and joyful account of the great master's art, written with all the playfulness that the subject deserves. Very delightful.
Orhan Pamuk
Nabokov claimed that 'originality' is a writer's only honesty. And Lila Azam Zanganeh's wonderful new book The Enchanter is a work of genuine and delightful originality. Her voice is intimate and alluring, and The Enchanter provokes a steady hum of joyousness in the reader's own mind. It is a timely reminder of why we read and write, and why now perhaps more than ever we need to connect to the world through Nabokov's enchanted 'third eye of imagination'.
Azar Nafisi
There is a popular misconception that writers, in order to produce their best work, must be in the throes of personal torment. Nabokov wrote with joy, and his life, however difficult or tragic its circumstances may have been at times, was suffused with an underlying optimism. This happy stratum is often overlooked by those who seek the somber side of writing, yet the joy of creation, the playful nuances of life and art, are ever-present. Lila Azam Zanganeh's new book is about the joyous Nabokov who, in the words of Updike, "writes ecstatically." And Azam Zanganeh, a gifted writer, brings him to life in an elegant, personal, highly accessible style, without any attempt to mimic that of her beloved subject.
Dimitri Nabokov