Look inside

Pale Fire

4.0(12)
Language
English
Not availableFree shipping
Buy Now

About the book

'One of the greatest books I've ever read. Its heart is strange, but it is huge; let yours beat in response' MARY GAITSKILL

Pale Fire, a 999-line poem, is the final work of the celebrated - and recently murdered - American author, John Francis Shade.

Here that poem is transcribed, introduced and annotated (at length) by Shade's fellow scholar, neighbour and apparent friend, Charles Kinbote.

Approaching this task with gusto, Kinbote's annotations reveal conclusive evidence of his own impact on Shade, disguised references to the northern land of Zembla, which he may or may not have once ruled over, and fuel for his many preoccupations and paranoia.

And - as his annotations become more desperate, more deluded, more deranged - Kinbote unintentionally sheds new light on the poet's last days and the pair's 'glorious friendship'.

A murder mystery, a work of wild invention, a reimagining of what the novel can do, a piece of exquisite comedy, Pale Fire is widely regarded as Nabokov's masterpiece and one of the most brilliant novels ever written.

A W&N Essential with an introduction from Mary Gaitskill

Editions (4)

ISBN9781474620871
PublisherOrion
Publication Date05/30/24
Pages256

Reviews & Ratings

12 ratings

1 reviews

4.0

Tap to filter

  • corsakfan
    corsakfan

    23 Followers

    5.0

    This book truly melted my brain, but I am a glutton for punishment, especially in book form, so this has been a good thing. This book is iconic and I will argue it is also a masterpiece right next to Lolita, or maybe a bit below it, but you get my point. In terms of structure, this story is a real winner. A 999-line poem written by John Shade is written about his relationships to Kinbote, his daughter, religion and spirituality, his life. In this sense, it is a metaliterary narrative method, since Shade and Kinbote both write about being writers and the creative process regarding writing. We, as readers, are reminded through this method that we are reading fiction. But because of this, the structure is not an easy one to follow - you have been warned, but do not let this scare you away. Then there are the multiple ways to interpret the story that really made my mind spin. I enjoy stories like this because I like to daydream and figure out what parts I believe or don't believe, but again, this is a lot to mentally chew on, so let yourself pick this up again for a second read. I'm going to again at some point.

    Oct 22, 2025

Reading is better with the READO app.

Discover books, track progress, read together.

Library

Keep track