The Gift (Nabokov book)

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Title The Gift
Author Vladimir Nabokov
Original title Дар
Language Russian
Publisher
Released 1938
ISBN 0-679-72725-6

The Gift (Russian: Дар, Dar; ISBN 0-679-72725-6) was Vladimir Nabokov's final Russian novel, and is considered to be his farewell to the world he was leaving behind. He wrote it between 1935 and 1937 while living in Berlin.

The main character is Fyodor Godunov-Cherdyntsev, a writer living in Berlin, and the story concerns his attempts to someday be worthy of and able to create the book of his dreams, to be entitled The Gift. It is possible to interpret the book as metafiction, and imagine that the book was actually written by Fyodor later in his life, though this is not the only possible interpretation.

Its heroine is not Zina, but Russian literature. The plot of Chapter One centres in Fyodor's poems. Chapter Two is a surge toward Pushkin in Fyodor's literary progress and contains his attempt to describe his father's zoological explorations. Chapter Three shifts to Gogol, but its real hub is the love poem dedicated to Zina. Fyodor's book on Chernyshevski, a spiral within a sonnet, takes care of Chapter Four. The last chapter combines all the preceding themes and adumbrates the book Fyodor dreams of writing someday: The Gift.

— Vladimir Nabokov, from the Foreword

Although Nabokov did not translate the novel from Russian into English by himself (it was done by Michael Scammell), he did assist and supervise the process.

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