“This fiery beast is the most cheerful of my novels,” Nabokov said of King, Queen, Knave, a satire in which a myopic, provincial, prudish, and humorless young man bursts into the cold paradise of a nouveau riche Berlin couple. The wife seduces the newcomer and makes him her lover. Shortly afterward, she convinces him to try to eliminate her husband. This is the seemingly simple premise of perhaps the most classic of Nabokov’s novels. But behind this apparent orthodoxy lies a remarkable technical complexity and, above all, a singular treatment dominated by a farcical tone.
Originally published in Berlin in the late 1920s and extensively reworked by Nabokov when it was translated into English in the late 1960s, King, Queen, Knave shows a strong influence of German Expressionism, especially in film, and contains a veritable outpouring of black humor.
Nabokov batters his cha...read more







