-
Charles Kinbote is a
fictional character who acts as the
unreliable narrator in
Vladimir Nabokov's
novel Pale Fire.
Kinbote appears to be the scholarly...
- and
index written by Shade's
neighbor and
academic colleague,
Charles Kinbote.
Together these elements form a
narrative in
which both
fictional authors...
-
ancestors of the last king of Zembla,
Kinbote's ostensible homeland. The
novel contains at
least one
other reference by
Kinbote to alderkings. In Jim Butcher's...
- otherwise. Roky's
screenplay describes his
meeting with the
third alien, Lord
Kinbote, who took him to the
center of the
Earth and told Roky that he had a great...
- Ainsworth. The "pine
groves of Boscobel" are
mentioned (twice) by
Charles Kinbote,
narrator of
Vladimir Nabokov's 1962
postmodern novel Pale Fire, in descriptions...
-
Lolita coming up the
American east
coast in 1958, and
narrator Charles Kinbote (in the
commentary later in the book)
notes it,
questioning why anyone...
-
professor John Shade,
Charles Kinbote, a
neighbor and
colleague of Shade's and
Charles the Beloved, king of Zembla.
Kinbote is the
ultimate unreliable commentator...
- P. Pucnam's Sons. $5.", The New York
Times September 27, 1964
Charles Kinbote,
Zashchita Luzhina Archived 2016-10-10 at the
Wayback Machine Daaim Shabazz...
-
Americans in 1911. A map of the
island is provided. In Pale Fire (1962),
Kinbote's home
country is
named Zembla, and
references to
Novaya Zemlya are made...
- to be a fantasy-prone
personality when he
conveys a
message from "Lord
Kinbote", a
creature who
comes "not from
outer space, but from
inner space... from...