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Lolita

Lolita

Written by

Vladimir Nabokov

Narrated by

Jeremy Irons

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Avg: 4.5 (29 ratings)

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Audiobook Download Information

Edition:
Unabridged (Random House Audio)
Length:
11 hours, 28 minutes
File Size:
315 MB (113 files)
Published:
April 2005

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Review by Alfred Soto, eMusic

The controversial classic is still as bracing — and funny — as ever.
In one of the most obvious bits of stuntcasting in recent memory, Jeremy Irons played Humbert Humbert in Adrian Lyne's lumpy 1998 film adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's 1955 masterpiece Lolita. The patron saint of grotesque sexuality since playing twin pervs in Dead Ringers, Irons lends his silken wisp to this recording of Nabokov's infamous novel — the one that Martin Amis extolled as "a cruel book about cruelty." Neither time nor familiarity has dulled the story's impact: a professor of literature becomes obsessed with the latest and most beguiling of a series of young girls, the daughter of kitsch-queen Charlotte Haze. Nabokov's story is really a tragedy of a ridiculous man, but a tragedy that blurs the distinctions between farce and prurience; Nabokov's triumph is to shade a merely monstrous stereotype into a creature of savage lusts capable of awesome wit yet susceptible to bathos.

Irons' narration embodies these qualities, and a few more beside; he's right at home with Nabokov's prose, the lushest since F. Scott Fitzgerald's. Note the dessicated splendor with which he enunciates pearls like "My little cup brims with tiddles." Since Nabokov's novel is as much about Humbert's blinkered response to an America at the peak of its own obsession with cheap consumer goods, Irons evokes just the right amount of detachment. "You can always count on a murderer having a fancy prose style," Humbert says. Say this for Irons: you can always count on a Very Serious British Actor having a fancy acting style.

Quotes from the Critics

"Lolita is a fine book, a distinguished book--all right then--a great book." - Esquire

"Nabokov's elusiveness...is not just playful. Forever changing sides and withholding judgment, he has contrived to forestall both our outrage at his nasty hero and our contemptuous dismissal of his trivial, complicit Juliet. His irony is never patronizing or angry....For all its glittering distractions and diversions, this is a love story, after all--an unexpected grand romance, with a poignance and conviction that match anything in our old box of American valentines." - New Yorker

"Passions never burned so feverishly as in this, the great and perverse love story of our times." - Washington Post Book World

"The first time I read LOLITA I thought it was one of the funniest books I'd ever come upon. (This was in the abbreviated version published in the 'Anchor Review' last year.) The second time I read it, uncut, I thought it was the saddest. I mention this personal reaction only because LOLITA is one of those occasional books which arrive swishing a long tail of opinion and reputation which can knock the unwary reader off his feet." - New York Times Book Review

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