CharlesKinbote is the unreliable narrator in Vladimir Nabokov's novel Pale Fire. Kinbote appears to be the scholarly author of the Foreword, Commentary...
commentary and index written by Shade's neighbor and academic colleague, CharlesKinbote. Together these elements form a narrative in which both fictional authors...
the end, she forms a plan to kill him in order to escape his power. CharlesKinbote, the narrator of Vladimir Nabokov's 1962 novel, Pale Fire, alludes...
commentary and index written by Shade's neighbor and academic colleague, CharlesKinbote. ELIZA Joseph Weizenbaum an early natural language processing computer...
Hurricane Lolita coming up the American east coast in 1958, and narrator CharlesKinbote (in the commentary later in the book) notes it, questioning why anyone...
Fire by Vladimir Nabokov, the fictional author of the "Foreword", CharlesKinbote, cites the following Russian joke: A newspaper account of a Russian...
York: G. P. Pucnam's Sons. $5.", The New York Times September 27, 1964 CharlesKinbote, Zashchita Luzhina Daaim Shabazz, "In Search of Luzhin's Defence",...
literature professor John Shade, CharlesKinbote, a neighbor and colleague of Shade's and Charles the Beloved, king of Zembla. Kinbote is the ultimate unreliable...
is alluding is also a principal theme of Pale Fire, referring to CharlesKinbote's misappropriation of the poem by the deceased John Shade that forms...
as mentioned in Kinbote's note to line 130 in Pale Fire by Vladimir Nabokov, and is also played by Fatima and her family in Charles Perrault's Bluebeard...
narrator, Kinbote, claims he is writing an analysis of John Shade's long poem "Pale Fire", but the narrative of the relationship between Shade and Kinbote is...
mythical kingdom 'Zembla' claimed to have been ruled by Nabokov's character Kinbote in the novel Pale Fire." Itylos pnin Bálint, 1993 Butterfly Timofey Pavlovich...
Americans in 1911. A map of the island is provided. In Pale Fire (1962), Kinbote's home country is named Zembla, and references to Novaya Zemlya are made...