December 2012

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And so, the next set of draft pages for the revised and updated bibliography: Transparent Things, Nabokov’s short novel of Person, patterns, and pencils. It was first published in 1972 by McGraw-Hill and went through seven further editions. Transparent Things was A42 in the 1986 bibliography.

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We continue with the next set of draft pages for the revised and updated bibliography: Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle, Nabokov’s long novel of Terra, Antiterra, and the texture of time. It was first published in 1969 by McGraw-Hill and went through eleven further editions. Nabokov’s “Notes to Ada” (by the mysterious Vivian Darkbloom) was first published in the 1970 Penguin wrappers edition. Ada was A40 in the 1986 bibliography.

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And on we go with the next set of draft pages for the revised and updated bibliography: Весна в Фиальте [Vesna v Fial’te / Spring in Fialta], a collection of 14 stories Nabokov composed between 1931 and 1940. It was the third of the three Nabokov books the New York-based Chekhov Publishing House issued. The collection has gone through one American and one Russian edition since its first appearance in 1956. Translations of the stories into English are in the The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov. Vesna v Fial’te was A29 in the 1986 bibliography.

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We move on with the next set of draft pages for the revised and updated bibliography: Nabokov’s Dozen, a collection of 13 stories written originally in Russian, French, and English, along with a bibliographic note from the author. It was first published in 1958 by Doubleday and went through nine further editions. These stories are now subsumed in the complete collection of 68 stories, The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov. Nabokov’s Dozen was A32 in the 1986 bibliography.

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The oddest thing about the Nabokov lots in the Bonhams auction today in New York was that a copy of Grozd’ went for more than seven times its high estimate (estimate, $1200–1800; result $13,000 + 25% buyer’s premium). Two bidders got into a bidders’ war and someone paid an exorbitant price for a book not even in its original wrappers and with brown stains (water?) on some of the leaves. Grozd’, published in Berlin in 1923 by Grani, is certainly a rare and hard to find book from very early in Nabokov’s career. Bonhams’ estimate was a fair estimate. But such a book in such condition is not worth $16,250 in any real market. But then odd things happen at auctions.

Of the other lots, Gornyi put’, a very, very nice copy, sold for $3800 (before premium), $300 above the top estimate. Podvig, a bit banged up and inscribed in 1932, went for $6500 (est. $7000–9000); Podvig, plain and with repairs (est. $700–1000), got up to only $480 and didn’t sell; Stikhotvoreniia: 1929–1951, with extensive repairs of its cover (est. $500–700), climbed to $320 and then pooped out; an Olympia Press Lolita, a very worn first issue (est. $1200–1800), sold for $950; and, an Ada, inscribed and lepidopterized to close friend George Hessen (est. $15,000–25,000), made it to $14,000 and sold.

What conclusions can I draw from this? None. The market for these things is very small and runs on passions and perceptions. And all it needs is two bidders.

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Seven Nabokov items are among the 230 lots of “Russian Literature and Works on Paper” (Akhmatova, Belyi, Bulgakov, Mandelshtam, Mayakovsky, Olesha, Pasternak, and other writers, artists, and composers) that the British auction house Bonhams is offering on 5 December at its New York branch. Click here to see them.

They are, with a note about each item and its estimate:

  • Grozd‘, rebound, $1200-1800
  • Gornii put’, original wrappers, $2500-3500
  • Podvig, rebacked, inscribed, $7000-9000
  • Podvig, repaired, $700-1000
  • Stikhotvoreniia: 1929-1952, badly stained, $500-700
  • Lolita, issue a, worn, $1200-1800
  • Ada, inscribed & lepidopterized, $15,000-25,000

The estimates are a bit high considering the relatively tarnished conditions some of the books are in. The buyer’s premium is 25%.

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