Ada or Ardor A Family Chronicle

Author: Vladimir Nabokov

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Mary

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Ganin, a young Russian exile, survives in interwar Berlin thanks to the most diverse jobs: waiter, door-to-door salesman, movie extra, etc.

At the same time, Ganin dreams of leaving the city and remembers his childhood and adolescence in his longed-for Russia and his early romance with Mary, a desired and idealized woman, a love lost in the past.

Mary is an early sample of Nabokov’s talent, and already contains many of the elements that make up the fascinating world of the brilliant author, as well as the admirable prose and the overflowing fabulous capacity that characterize his literary production.

Lolita

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Lolita is Nabokov's best-known novel, first published in 1955, about the relationship between a 40-year-old adult and his 12-year-old stepdaughter.

Not without controversy, it is considered by many critics and scholars to be a masterpiece of contemporary world literature and a modern classic.

Among the events that may have influenced Nabokov in his novel is the 1948 kidnapping of Florence Sally Horner, aged 11 or 12, according to some sources, who was abducted by a middle-aged man.

Laughter In The Dark

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Laughter in the Darkis about a middle-aged man's affection for a very young woman, which results in a mutually parasitic relationship.

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Elisabeth leaves and takes their daughter, Irma, with her. Albinus then becomes even more attracted to Margot. In the end, she manipulates him into allowing her to move into his apartment, where he resided with his wife, and strives to get him to divorce her so that she can marry him and have access to his substantial fortune.