Michael Maar
Author of Speak, Nabokov
About the Author
Michael Maar is a visiting professor at Stanford University.
Image credit: from wikipedia
Works by Michael Maar
Heute bedeckt und kühl: Große Tagebücher von Samuel Pepys bis Virginia Woolf (2013) 18 copies, 1 review
Das violette Hündchen: Große Literatur im Detail | Vom Autor des Bestsellers "Die Schlange im Wolfspelz" (2025) 6 copies
Sand 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Maar, Michael
- Birthdate
- 1960-07-17
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- Germanist
Schriftsteller
Literaturkritiker - Organizations
- Deutsche Akademie für Sprache und Dichtung
Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin - Awards and honors
- Johann-Heinrich-Merck-Preis (1995)
Lessing-Preis für Kritik Förderpreis (2000) - Relationships
- Maar, Paul (father)
- Nationality
- Germany
- Birthplace
- Stuttgart, Germany
- Map Location
- Germany
Members
Reviews
Michael Maar, who some years ago discovered a (rather weak) German short story titled Lolita which probably has inspired Nabokov, takes us on a short but sweet promenade through Zembla with interesting aperçus on N's work and life. Themes covered are N's dislike of Thomas Mann, his love of Andersen, Schopenhauer and Proust, aspects of Humbert, Lolita and Pnin as well as N's ambivalence towards nymphs and homosexuals. It is infuriating that Maar refuses to disclose his opinion. He takes the show more reader on an extensive tour of Nabokovian characters and biographical facts but stops short of presenting a conclusion. Reading the book is like waking up from a dream. Images are still lingering, but its essence escapes. Nevertheless, it is fine that somebody prepares to pick up the torch of the aged German Nabokov guru Dieter E. Zimmer. show less
A leading German scholar reveals the secret history of Nabokov's infamous novel. Does it ring a bell? The first-person narrator, a cultivated man of middle age, looks back on the story of an amour fou. It all starts when, traveling abroad, he takes a room as a lodger. The moment he sees the daughter of the house, he is lost. She is a pre-teen, whose charms instantly enslave him. Heedless of her age, he becomes intimate with her. In the end she dies, and the narratormarked by her show more foreverremains alone. The name of the girl supplies the title of the story: Lolita. We know the girl and her story, and we know the title. But the author was Heinz von Eschwege, whose tale of Lolita appeared in 1916 under the pseudonym Heinz von Lichberg, forty years before Nabokov's celebrated novel took the world by storm. Von Lichberg later became a prominent journalist in the Nazi era, and his youthful work faded from view. The Two Lolitas uncovers a remarkable series of parallels between the two works and their authors. Did Vladimir Nabokov, author of an imperishable Lolita who remained in Berlin until 1937, know of von Lichberg's tale? And if so, did he adopt it consciously, or was this a classic case of "cryptoamnesia," with the earlier tale existing for Nabokov as a hidden, unacknowledged memory? In this extraordinary literary detective story, Michael Maar casts new light on the making of one of the most influential works of the twentieth century. show less
Übersicht über grosse und wichtige Tagebücher aus allen Epochen, Versuche, das Phänomen an Hand von Beispielen zu ergründen und erhellen, viele spannende Ausschnitte aus Tagebüchern.
Apr 7, 2014German
Awards
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 21
- Members
- 264
- Popularity
- #87,285
- Rating
- 3.4
- Reviews
- 4
- ISBNs
- 41
- Languages
- 3















