Fialta's Spring Fialta Spring Nialokov, "Fialta's Spring is Overcast and Dull" (Nabokov 413) is a very typical beginning of Nabokov. This line comes from a person who pays too much attention to the philosophy and raises many questions. Initially, Nabokov intentionally missed Fialta's trivia. If so, why? Perhaps the answer to this question is that Nabokov will use this line as a reference while referring to the town and the story itself.
"Spring of Fialta is cloudy and dull," this interesting and painful story begins. Perhaps the least important story Nabokov has wrote so far. Behind Nabokov, whether it is a long story or a bitter sentence, it is a love story that has been pursued for many years. Every detail works here together so that Nabokov prove the illusion of love and memory, and readers patience is rewarded. Interested people can find it online, or with a great selection of love stories, my misty sparrow is dead
Premise for desalination of the story: When the building was inhabited, the unknown narrator fell in love with other inhabitants named Sons. However, the architect Stadbaaken, who runs this place, is focusing on the residential area Fialta. "It does not satisfy desires, but turn desires into art". Stadbaaken may sleep with Sands. By sweeping out the Thanksgiving turkey at the table, he eventually caught the narrator and the sons and showed a big show.
Vladimir Nabokov often uses this technology. Humbert Humbert is the hero and a storyteller of Nabokov Lolita and he tells stories in a way that proves in particular the young sufferings of his own. Sexual relationship with the 12 - year - old stepdaughter. In the pale fire of Nabokov, the reliability, reasons, and intention of the narrator, Charles Kimbert is one of the central themes of the novel. In some cases, untrusted stories can bring wonders to novels. For example, in Kingsley Amis 'Greenman', the unreliability of the narrator Maurice Arrington has impaired the boundary between reality and fantasy. The same applies to the magic of Nigel Williams. In the fingerprint example by Iain Pears, several views of the narrator are also used. That narrative is unreliable and is considered competing with each other.