Invitation to a Beheading

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Title Invitation to a Beheading

2001 Penguin Modern Classics edition
Author Vladimir Nabokov
Original title Приглашение на казнь
Translator Dmitri Nabokov in collaboration with the author
Country Russia
Language Russian
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher
Released 1935-1936
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
ISBN NA & reissue ISBN 0-679-72531-8 (Vintage; Reissue edition, September 19, 1989)

Invitation to a Beheading (Russian: Приглашение на казнь, Priglasheniye na kazn') is a novel by the Russian-American author Vladimir Nabokov. It was originally published in Russian in 1935-1936 as a serial in Contemporary Notes--the most respected literary journal of the Russian emigration. It was published in book form in 1938, and in English in 1959, translated by Nabokov's son, Dmitri Nabokov, under the author's supervision.

The novel tells the story of a man named Cincinnatus C., a citizen of some unnamed dream country, who is imprisoned and sentenced to death for "gnostic turpitude". He is surrounded by his jailer (Rodion), the director of the jail (Rodrig), and his lawyer (Roman), all of whom have names reminiscent of Dostoyevsky's Crime and Punishment. Indifferent to the absurdity and vulgarity around him, Cincinnatus finds his true life in the journal, where he records his visions of an ideal world. Taken to be executed, he refuses to believe in either death or his executioners, and as the ax falls the false world dissolves and he joins the spirits of his fellow visionaries in "reality."

While Nabokov stated in an interview that of all his novels he held the greatest affection for Lolita, it was for Invitation to a Beheading that he held the greatest esteem.


Josephine Shaffer

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