Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle

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Penguin Classics edition of Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle
Penguin Classics edition of Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle

Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle is a novel by Vladimir Nabokov published in 1969.

Ada began to materialize in 1959, when Nabokov was flirting with two projects: "The Texture of Time" and "Letters from Terra." In 1965, he began to see a link between the two ideas, finally composing a unified novel from February of 1966 to October of 1968. The published cumulation would become his longest, arguably richest work. Ada was ultimately given a mixed reception.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle is divided into five parts, each approximately half the length of the preceding one. As they progress chronologically, this structure evokes a sense of a person reflecting on his own memories, with an adolescence stretching out epically, and many later years simply flashing by. A crude idea of the years covered by each section are provided in brackets, below, but the narrator's thoughts often stray outside of the periods noted.

[edit] Part 1: 43 chapters (1863–1888)

The first four chapters provide a sort of unofficial prologue, in that they move swiftly back and forth through the chronology of the narrative, but mostly deal with events between 1863 and 1884, when the main thrust of the story commences. They depict Van and Ada discovering their true relationship, Demon and Marina's tempestuous affair, Marina's sister Aqua's descent into madness and obsession with Terra and water, and Van's "first love," a girl he sees in an antique shop but never speaks to. Some readers regard these first four chapters as being deliberately difficult.

Chapters 4 to 43 mostly deal with Van's adolescence, and his first meetings with his "cousin" Ada—focused on the two summers when he joins her (and her "sister" Lucette) at Ardis Hall, their ancestral home, in 1884 and 1888.

In 1884 they also discover, by a process of deduction, that they are in fact not cousins but brother and sister. Van's father, Demon, is in fact father to them both, and Ada's mother, Marina, is mother to them both. Van's supposed mother, Aqua, is Marina's sister, and Ada's supposed father, Dan, is Demon's first cousin. This makes Lucette the uterine half-sister of both of them.

Van and Ada fall passionately in love, and their affair is marked by a powerful sense of romantic eroticism. This section ends with Van's discovery of her unfaithfulness and his flight from Ardis to exact revenge upon those "rivals" of whom he is aware—Phillip Rack and Percy de Prey. He is distracted by a chance altercation with a soldier named Tapper, whom he challenges to a duel and by whom he is wounded. In hospital he chances upon Phillip Rack, who is dying, and whom Van cannot bring himself to exact revenge upon. He then receives word that Percy de Prey has been shot and killed in Antiterra's version of the ongoing Crimean War. He moves to live with Cordula de Prey, Percy's cousin, whilst he fully recovers. They have a shallow physical relationship, which provides Van with respite from the emotional strain of his feelings for Ada.

[edit] Part 2: 11 chapters (1888–1893)

Van spends his time developing his studies in psychology, and visiting a number of the "Villa Venus" upper-class brothels. In the autumn of 1892 Lucette, now having declared her love for Van, brings him a letter from Ada in which she announces she has received an offer of marriage from Andrey Vinelander. Should Van wish to invite her to live with him she will refuse the offer. Van does so, and they commence living together in an apartment Van has purchased from Ada's old school-friend, Cordula de Prey.

In February 1893 their father, Demon, arrives with news that his cousin (Ada's supposed father, but actual stepfather) Dan has died following a period of exposure caused by running naked into the woods near his home during a terrifying hallucinatory episode. Upon grasping the situation regarding Van and Ada, he tells Van that Ada would be happier if he "gave her up"—and what is more, he would disown Van completely if he failed to do so. Van acquiesces, leaves, and attempts suicide, which fails when his gun fails to fire. He then leaves his Manhattan apartment and preoccupies himself with hunting down a former servant at Ardis, Kim Beauharnais, who had been blackmailing them with photographic evidence of their affair, and beating him with an alpenstock until he is blind.

[edit] Part 3: 8 chapters (1893–1922)

With Ada having married Andrey Vinelander, Van occupies himself in traveling and his studies, until 1901 when Lucette reappears in England. She has herself booked on the same transatlantic ship, the Tobakoff, that Van is taking back to America. She attempts to seduce him on the crossing, but is foiled when Ada appears as an actress in the film, Don Juan's Last Fling, that they are watching together on the onboard cinema. Lucette consumes a number of sleeping pills and commits suicide by throwing herself from the Tobakoff into the Atlantic. In March of 1905, Demon dies in a plane crash.

Later in 1905, Ada and Andrey arrive in Switzerland as part of a party engaged in uncovering Lucette's fortune, concealed in various hidden bank accounts. Van meets with them, and together he and Ada formulate a plan for her to leave her husband and live with him. This is now considered possible due to the death of Demon. During their stay in Switzerland, however, Andrey falls ill with tuberculosis, and Ada decides that she cannot abandon him until he has recovered. Van and Ada part, and Andrey remains ill for 17 years, at which point he dies. Ada then flies back to Switzerland to meet with Van.

[edit] Part 4: Not subdivided (i.e. 1 chapter) (1922)

This part consists of Van's lecture on "The Texture of Time," apparently delivered into a tape recorder as he travels across the width of Switzerland to meet Ada, transcribed, and then edited to merge into a description of his and Ada's actual meeting, and then out again. This makes this part of the novel notably self-reflexive, and it is sometimes cited as the "difficult" part of the novel, some reviewers even stating that they wished Nabokov had "left it out." It could conversely be argued that it is one of the most potent evocations of one of the novel's central themes, the relation of personal experience of Time to one's sense of being in and of the world.

At the end of this section, Van and Ada join to live as man and wife.

[edit] Part 5: 6 chapters (1922–1967)

This section of the novel is the one most clearly set in 1967, as Van completes his memoirs as laid out in Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle. He describes his contentment, such as it is, his relationship with his editor and assistant, the ravages of time on his body, and the continuing presence and love of Ada. This is interspersed with remarks on various events that have occurred since 1922. As cancer develops painfully within him, Van breaks off from correcting his essentially complete but not yet fully polished work, and he and Ada commit mutual euthanasia, and "die into the finished book, into Eden or Hades."

[edit] External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
  • Nabokov Library
  • AdaOnline "combines the text of Vladimir Nabokov's longest and richest novel, in one frame, and in another, annotations and fore- and afternotes to each chapter, hyperlinked to each other and to a third frame incorporating supplementary materials, especially pictorial illustrations and a list of verbal and thematic motifs in the novel."
  • Bridges to Antiterra is an attempt at cataloguing and providing, when available, public-domain internet versions of the numerous texts to which Nabokov alluded in Ada.
  • A 1969 Time Interview with Nabokov, mostly regarding the then-recent publication of Ada.
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