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Cleaning Nabokov's House

by Leslie Daniels

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17720156,267 (3.31)1
Barb Barrett, numb and adrift after losing custody of her children, rents an upstate New York house where Vladimir Nabokov once lived where she discovers a manuscript of possible value and finds a way to love again after the marriage she gave up everything for fails.
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“Cleaning Nabokov's House,” the 2011 novel by Leslie Daniels, amounts to a modern Cinderella story, although instead of a glass slipper there are, as Daniels tells us in the opening lines, a blue pot floating in a lake, a house where Vladimir Nabokov once lived, a book, a lawyer, a whorehouse, science and from there the world.

As the story opens Barb Barrett, pushing 40, has lost everything — her husband, her two children and her self-respect. She left her home of her own will and now cannot return. Her husband has already found another woman and has won custody of the children.

She finds herself living in a house where the author of “Lolita” once lived (as did the author herself, it turns out), and there she finds scraps of a novel, perhaps a draft written by Nabokov himself. The novel is about Babe Ruth, hardly a likely topic for the author more interested in butterflies than baseball. But perhaps he did write it. Can she turn the book into enough money to win back her children?

Barb does make enough money to resuscitate her life, but it comes not through the book but through that whorehouse. She notices that the town where she lives seems to be full of bored housewives, and so she hires college men to be her whores, who mostly just listen to the women talk. She manages to turn it into scientific research. The fact that the judge who decides her custody appeal has been one of her clients helps her win her case. And, yes, there is a charming prince.

As with Cinderella, not much here is convincing, yet readers get the happy ending they desire. And unlike Cinderella, this story is hilarious. Daniels is a wonderfully comic writer whose sentences dazzle. Yet I can find no trace of a second Leslie Daniels novel. Too bad. ( )
  hardlyhardy | Dec 7, 2023 |
I gobbled this in a day. It's a light and easy read, but full of emotion and a very like-able and real heroine. ( )
  LMJenkins | Nov 28, 2018 |
When finding a lost Nabokov manuscript about Babe Ruth and baseball is one of the *less* zany parts of a book... you know you've got something good. A goofy wish-fulfillment romance. ( )
  ewillse | Mar 23, 2014 |
When finding a lost Nabokov manuscript about Babe Ruth and baseball is one of the *less* zany parts of a book... you know you've got something good. A goofy wish-fulfillment romance. ( )
  PatienceFortitude | Mar 6, 2014 |
When finding a lost Nabokov manuscript about Babe Ruth and baseball is one of the *less* zany parts of a book... you know you've got something good. A goofy wish-fulfillment romance. ( )
  PatienceFortitude | Mar 6, 2014 |
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For Mary Brett Daniels and Neal Daniels
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I knew I could stay in this town when I found the blue enamel pot floating in the lake.
Quotations
I knew I could stay in this town when I found the blue enamel pot floating in the lake. The pot led me to the house, the house led me to the book, the book to the lawyer, the lawyer to the whorehouse, the whorehouse to science, and from science I joined the world.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Barb Barrett, numb and adrift after losing custody of her children, rents an upstate New York house where Vladimir Nabokov once lived where she discovers a manuscript of possible value and finds a way to love again after the marriage she gave up everything for fails.

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"I knew I could stay in this town when I found the blue enamel pot floating in the lake. The pot led me to the house, the house led me to the book, the book to the lawyer, the lawyer to the whorehouse, the whorehouse to science, and from science I joined the world" So begins Leslie Daniel's funny and moving novel about one woman's journey toward self-fulfillment. When Barb Barrett decides to walk out of her lovely (but safe) marriage, she doesn't quite realize she will lose everything - her home, her financial security, even her beloved children. Approaching forty with her life in shambles and no family or friends to turn to, she must now discover what it means to be alone in what has become a whole new world. Guided only by her intense inner voice, and a questionable business plan, Barb is determined to pick up the pieces of her shattered life. She moves into a house once occupied to Vladimir Nabokov, author of the notorious Lolita, and discovers a manuscript that may or may not be his. Barb is gradually led on a new path, one that is far from the life she once envisioned but that promises wisdom and meaning. Written in sharp, elegant prose with gentle touches of humor and wit, Cleaning Nabokov's Houe presnets a new vision of modern womanhood, reminding us that it is never too late to find our truest selves. ( ARC)
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