Stotty,
Did you know that Nabokov himself was a European pro supporting himself by giving tennis lessons at one time? As well as a chess player, a distinguished lepidopterist with his name on a butterfly species or two, and quite a few other things. I believe that he and his son Dmitri hit the ball pretty good. Don't know about Vera, N's beautiful wife, who sat next to him and took notes as he delivered each lecture at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, but I would be surprised if she didn't play tennis, too.
I once received an unsolicited assignment to do a magazine article on N's biographer, Fred, who was Dean Emeritus at the University of Virginia. The editor had made a mistake however. Fred was not N's biographer but his bibliographer. Because of this mistake, the magazine never used my article although I wrote it three different ways. After the third attempt, the magazine finally gave up, broke its silence and paid me in full.
A highlight of this mostly humiliating experience-- especially since Fred's wife was a mentor and best friend of mine-- was that Fred got me into the cork-lined room at UVA where all of N's typed lectures and teaching copies for literature courses at Cornell, Wellesley and Harvard were stored.
I have to say that N's handwriting is the best I've ever seen in my life-- small, continental, utterly clear and well formed. In addition, he could draw and paint. In a margin of N's teaching copy of Flaubert's EMMA BOVARY is a tall watercolor of Emma's famous hat that is about as perfect as anyone could imagine.
Note: I use the letter "N" instead of the full name Vladimir Nabokov so that the "N" can refer either to Nabokov or Napoleon-- not my idea but I run with it nevertheless.
Fascinating-- your intelligence about "Ned Litam." A similar sounding name is uttered by Tilden in one of the instructional films he made, or maybe I'm thinking of Ned Swattem in MATCH PLAY AND THE SPIN OF THE BALL or maybe in one of Tilden's other books.
Did you know that Nabokov himself was a European pro supporting himself by giving tennis lessons at one time? As well as a chess player, a distinguished lepidopterist with his name on a butterfly species or two, and quite a few other things. I believe that he and his son Dmitri hit the ball pretty good. Don't know about Vera, N's beautiful wife, who sat next to him and took notes as he delivered each lecture at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, but I would be surprised if she didn't play tennis, too.
I once received an unsolicited assignment to do a magazine article on N's biographer, Fred, who was Dean Emeritus at the University of Virginia. The editor had made a mistake however. Fred was not N's biographer but his bibliographer. Because of this mistake, the magazine never used my article although I wrote it three different ways. After the third attempt, the magazine finally gave up, broke its silence and paid me in full.
A highlight of this mostly humiliating experience-- especially since Fred's wife was a mentor and best friend of mine-- was that Fred got me into the cork-lined room at UVA where all of N's typed lectures and teaching copies for literature courses at Cornell, Wellesley and Harvard were stored.
I have to say that N's handwriting is the best I've ever seen in my life-- small, continental, utterly clear and well formed. In addition, he could draw and paint. In a margin of N's teaching copy of Flaubert's EMMA BOVARY is a tall watercolor of Emma's famous hat that is about as perfect as anyone could imagine.
Note: I use the letter "N" instead of the full name Vladimir Nabokov so that the "N" can refer either to Nabokov or Napoleon-- not my idea but I run with it nevertheless.
Fascinating-- your intelligence about "Ned Litam." A similar sounding name is uttered by Tilden in one of the instructional films he made, or maybe I'm thinking of Ned Swattem in MATCH PLAY AND THE SPIN OF THE BALL or maybe in one of Tilden's other books.
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