![]() ![]() ![]() It recounts, for example, how his first butterfly escapes at Vyra, in Russia, and is "overtaken and captured" forty years later on a butterfly hunt in Colorado. Field indicated that the chapter on butterflies is an interesting example how the author deploys the fictional with the factual. Andrew Field observed that while Nabokov evoked the past through “puppets of memory” (in the characterizations of his educators, Colette, or Tamara, for example), his intimate family life with Véra and Dmitri remained "untouched". ![]() Subsequent pieces of the autobiography were published as individual or collected stories, with each chapter able to stand on its own. Nabokov published " Mademoiselle O", which became Chapter Five of the book, in French in 1936, and in English in The Atlantic Monthly in 1943, without indicating that it was non-fiction. ![]()
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