Lolita
Published by Corgi Books, London, 1969Lolita is Vladimir Nabokov’s controversial and masterful novel that delves into the mind of Humbert Humbert, a cultured but disturbed man who becomes obsessively infatuated with Dolores Haze, a 12-year-old girl whom he nicknames “Lolita.” The novel is a dark exploration of obsession, manipulation, and the nature of desire, narrated by Humbert in a style that is both poetic and unsettling. Nabokov challenges readers with his unreliable narrator and morally complex narrative, making Lolita both a disturbing and compelling literary experience.
The novel’s cultural impact was further amplified by its cinematic adaptation by Stanley Kubrick, who directed the 1962 film Lolita. Kubrick’s version, shaped by the censorship constraints of its time, translated Nabokov’s provocative material into a subtler, ironic, and psychologically charged film, emphasizing satire and moral ambiguity while preserving the story’s unsettling core. The adaptation helped cement Lolita as a work that transcended literature to become a lasting cultural and cinematic provocation.
Lolita has been one of the most banned and challenged books in literary history due to its provocative subject matter—specifically, its portrayal of a pedophilic relationship. The novel’s frank exploration of Humbert’s obsession with a young girl, combined with its explicit content and themes of manipulation and abuse, led to widespread outrage and censorship upon its release. Lolita was banned in multiple countries, including France, England, and Argentina, and faced numerous legal battles. Critics argued that the book’s treatment of such taboo subjects was not only offensive but also dangerous. However, despite—or perhaps because of—its controversy, Lolita has since been recognized as a brilliant, albeit disturbing, work of art, lauded for its linguistic genius and its exploration of the darkest corners of the human psyche.
-Fourteenth Corgi paperback edition, first reissue. This late British paperback reissue of Nabokov's controversial masterpiece featuring Bert Stern's famous 1960 publicity photograph of Sue Lyon as Lolita on the cover was released just twenty days prior to the author inscribing it in Russian to his wife Véra on May 21, 1969, along with an original colored drawing of an invented butterfly he named "babochka skoraya," which translates as "lissom butterfly."
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