Bend Sinister (novel)

For the album by The Fall, see Bend Sinister (album). For the Canadian musical group, see Bend Sinister (band).
Bend Sinister

Storm clouds and streak lightning adorn the cover of the book's first edition

Cover of the first edition
Author Vladimir Nabokov
Country United States
Language English
Genre Dystopian fiction
Publisher Henry Holt and Company
Publication date
1947

Bend Sinister is a dystopian novel written by Vladimir Nabokov during the years 1945 and 1946, and published by Henry Holt and Company in 1947. It was Nabokov's second English-language novel and eleventh overall.

The Title

A "bend sinister" is a heraldic charge: A bar drawn from the upper left to the lower right on a coat of arms (from the point of view of the person wearing the shield). A bend, the standard stripe on a coat of arms, is the reverse: It crosses from the right shoulder of the wearer to the lower left side of the trunk. A standard bend is sometimes called a bend dexter to distinguish it from the bend sinister.[1] In a 1963 edition of the book, Nabokov explains that "this choice of a title was an attempt to suggest an outline broken by refraction, a distortion in the mirror of being, a wrong turn taken by life." In the novel, Nabokov often uses wordplay concerning leftward (or "sinister") movements.

Plot summary

This book takes place in a fictitious European city known as Padukgrad, where a government arises following the rise of a philosophy known as "Ekwilism", which discourages the idea of anyone being different from anyone else, and promotes the state as the prominent good in society. The story begins with the protagonist, Adam Krug, who had just lost his wife to an unsuccessful surgery. He is quickly asked to sign and deliver a speech to the leader of the new government by the head of the university and his colleagues, but he refuses. This government is led by a man named Paduk and his "Party of the Average Man." As it happens, the world-renowned philosopher Adam Krug was, in his youth, a classmate of Paduk, at which period he had bullied him and referred to him disparagingly as "the Toad". Paduk arrests many of the people close to Krug and those against his Ekwilist philosophy, and attempts to get the influential Professor Krug to promote the state philosophy to help stomp out dissent and increase his personal prestige.

Paduk tries to entice Krug with various offers, but Krug always refuses, even after his friends and acquaintances, like Ember, are incarcerated. Finally, Paduk orders the kidnapping of Krug's young son, David, for a ransom. After Krug capitulates and is prepared to promote the Ekwilist philosophy, Paduk promises David's safe return. However, when David is to be returned to him, Krug is horrified to find that the child he is presented is not his son. There has been a mix-up, and David has been sent to an orphanage that doubles as a violent prisoner rehabilitation clinic where he was killed when offered as a "release" to the prisoners.

Paduk makes an offer to allow Krug to personally kill those responsible, but he swears at the officials and is locked in a large prison cell. Another offer is made to Krug to free 24 opponents of Ekwilism, including many of his friends, in exchange for doing so. Krug refuses and begins to charge at Paduk and is killed by a pair of bullets from the dictator's henchmen. At this point, Nabokov feels such pity for Krug that he actually intervenes and emphasizes that Bend Sinister was, thankfully, a fictional story and that Adam Krug never existed.[2]

Characters

Adam Krug University philosopher and protagonist. Krug is the foremost writer and thinker of Padukgrad. His cooperation with and endorsement of the Party of the Average Man is crucial to the regime's international relations.

Olga Krug Adam's late wife, who dies right before the novel begins.

David Krug Adam's son, who is killed by Padukgrad criminals in a mix-up.

Paduk Nicknamed "The Toad", he is the dictator of Padukgrad, former schoolmate of Krug and founder of Ekwilism.

Ember A Padukgrad intellectual who studies Shakespeare and is Adam's best friend.

Mariette The Krugs' housemaid, sent by Paduk to spy on Adam and David. She flirts with the elder Krug often and manages to seduce him.

Background

Publication History

Nabokov, who was teaching at Wellesley College at the time, first began writing Bend Sinister in 1942 while the greater part was composed in the winter and spring of 19451946, soon after the completion of World War II.[3] The novel's title was quite volatile, as Nabokov originally titled it The Person from Porlock before soon electing for Game is Gunm.[4] It would undergo further changes, to Solus Rex, before finally settling on the current name.[5] The manuscript was sent to Allen Tate, an editor at Henry Holt, in the early summer of 1947 and published shortly after, on June 12, 1947.[6]

Influences

During the war against the Axis powers and especially immediately after their downfall, there began to be a new wave of pro-USSR sentiment in America, as the Soviet army had played a large role in the Allied victory. Nabokov, a fierce opponent to Communism, was quite disturbed by this and second and last overtly political novel (the first was Invitation to a Beheading) in Bend Sinister. Brian Boyd writes that Nabokov wrote the novel in "an attempt to show that Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia represented fundamentally the same brutish vulgarity inimical to everything most vulnerable and most valuable in human life".[7] In February of 1943, Nabokov would give an impassioned speech at a panel discussion at Wellesley, extolling the virtues of democracy while denouncing totalitarian states in the process:

Democracy is humanity at its best, not because we happen to think that a republic is better than a king and a king is better than nothing and nothing is better dictator, but because it is the natural condition of every man ever since the human mind became conscious not only of the world but of itself. Morally, democracy is invincible. Physically, that side will win which has the better guns. Of faith and pride, both sides have plenty. That our faith and our pride are of a totally different order cannot concern an enemy who believes in shedding blood and is proud of its own".[8]

Criticism

Reception

Bend Sinister generally did not receive much attention initially, due to its poor promotion by Henry Holt. Of the reviews it did garner, reactions were generally mixed, perhaps best exemplified by The New Republic's comments which called it "at once impressive, powerful and oddly exasperating". The novel did receive glowing reviews in Time and The New York Times, however.[9] Furthermore, the editor Nabokov sent the original manuscript to, Allen Tate, absolutely loved the work, calling it "the only first rate piece of literature that I have had the privilege of reading as an editor". Tate admired the work so much that he personally would write the blurb for the novel, concluding in it that the "mastery of English prose exhibited [in Bend Sinister] has not been surpassed by any writer of our generation who was born to English".[10] Among contemporary critics, Bend Sinister is generally seen as the weakest novel Nabokov wrote in America, behind Pnin, Lolita and Pale Fire, and a work of middling quality overall. Although Brian Boyd praises the "jarring self-consciousness" and "inventiveness and challenge of particular passages" in the novel. He concludes however that Bend Sinister "does not reward us enough as we read to justify all its difficulties and disruptions".[11]

Film

A black and white German television film was made in West Germany during 1970. It was directed by Herbert Vesely and starred Helmut Käutner as Adam Krug and Heinrich Schweiger as Paduk.[12]

References

Further Reading

Boyd, Brian (1991).Vladimir Nabokov: The American Years. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-06797-X.

Nabokov, Vladimir Vladimirovich. Bend Sinister. New York, NY: Vintage International, 1990. Print. ISBN 9780679727279


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