Articles Written by:    ALEXANDER NEMSER     

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The Limply Rhymed Quatrains And Baffling Torsions Of Sense In Nabokov's Translations

Vladimir Nabokov, who throughout his career cultivated his reputation as the most famous literary exile since Ovid, was recognized in his lifetime not only for his novels but also for his authority on Russian cultural and aesthetic matters. He gave ...

From ALEXANDER NEMSER, The New Republic,  23 Feb 2009
Related Topics: Vladimir Nabokov

Allen Grossman's Poetry Provides Eternal Answers Without Ever Offering The Question

At the start of Descartes' Loneliness, the tenth collection of poetry by Allen Grossman, the speaker has posed a question to the world that we, the readers, have arrived too late to hear. The book begins, in the title poem, with the world's ...

From ALEXANDER NEMSER, The New Republic,  10 Nov 2008
Related Topics: Wallace Stevens,  Emily Dickinson,  Allen Ginsberg

Gorky And Tolstoy, Russia's Twinned Literary Superstars

Aleksei Maksimovich Peshkov, the future Maxim Gorky, was born in 1868 in Nizhni Novgorod on the Volga River, and grew up in what he later described in his melancholy, violent autobiography as "that close-knit, suffocating little world of pain and ...

From ALEXANDER NEMSER, The New Republic,  21 Jul 2008

'War And Peace' And The Meaning of Human Existence

This article is available to subscribers only Subscribe today and get 4 Weeks FREE, or, you can take our 4-week Free trial offer and try out TNR Digital at no risk. If you like what you see, you'll automatically be upgraded and charged for a year (24 ...

From ALEXANDER NEMSER, The New Republic,  9 Jan 2008

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