Has no other scholar explored Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire as well as Brian Boyd? I enjoyed reading this book-long essay for the most part, though I confess to reading the last third impatiently, and I find Boyd's main thesis of Pale Fire unconvincing. That said, there's much to learn from Boyd's interpretation, and it seems to me his solution to the puzzle at the heart of Nabokov's work is almost correct. Spoilers to Pale Fire follow.
Of course Boyd is entirely correct that the most superficial interpretation the intelligent reader could form of Pale Fire is that the odd neighbor of our poet John Shade is in fact the king of a faraway frozen land, living in exile in New Wye, Nabokov's stand-in for New York. At the next level of interpretation the reader will conclude that it is not the case that the neighbor is an exiled king but a mentally ill person suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, multiple personality disorder, superiority complex, as well as a host of other things.
What struck me in Boyd's exploration of this second level of interpretation is the extent to which this neighbor draws from his surroundings to construct his magical frozen kingdom. The photographs on the wall of his rented home become characters in his story. Details of the outside world come from the set of encyclopedias along the walls. As for his academic colleagues (he is, after all, a professor at the same university where John Shade teaches), he transforms those into political extremists in search of his treasure, the crowned jewels.
And there is one major detailed I missed in reading Pale Fire for which I am grateful to Boyd here. The man who shot John Shade in the heart did in fact kill the man he aimed at, though not his intended target. The man who shot Shade was no assassin from a foreign land as the mentally ill neighbor believes but another mentally ill person who mistakes Shade for a man who had wronged him. This mentally ill person's name is Jack Grey, an escapee from an asylum. It is in response to this man that our neighbor extends his persecution complex and his paranoia, of which 40 per cent of his text is concerned with.
What about Boyd's central thesis? Let's state what it is first: The poem Pale Fire by John Shade and its booklong commentary provided by our unstable neighbor are in fact written by them but at the influence of the wraithish presence of Shade's daughter, Hazel, who committed suicide and who can be seen to be at the heart of the poem. What speaks against this claim? Little textual evidence, and what is called up by Boyd seems to point to a less definite conclusion that I think coheres with a more reasonable thesis.
Here is my thesis of Pale Fire, though I could be wrong. Pale Fire is a book that explores how art helps us wrestle with and can comfort us when we are faced with the limitations of our own mortality. That is awfully high-falutin' but I think it's correct and rather rich. Let's explore.
Art for Nabokov is about "turning accident into ornament," imposing meaning onto a series of what seem like random events. In particular, the poet in the novel, John Shade, is trying to come to terms with his daughter's suicide. There may or may not be life beyond the grave. There in the book, it does seem, following an extremely convincing section by Boyd, that Shade's aunt Maud is or is believed to be communicating with Hazel after death, warning her not to go on a date the night she will kill herself. It also seems, in line with Boyd's argumentation, that Hazel either is or embodies in Shade's mind reincarnated as the butterfly the Red Admirable. But the book does not demonstrate, contrary to Boyd's claim, that anyone is definitely communicating beyond the grave, though they might be. The ambiguity is what helps give body to the poem and the narrative commentary.
Let's explore the importance of accident in art a little more. Definitely life's accidents can be shaped into art, and all the better for it, because then through the art we can make sense of something that seemed as though it did not make sense. This is relevant to the work because the accidental meeting of John Shade and the mentally unstable neighbor does point to an influence they have on each other, though it's not the kind of influence our neighbor tells us it is. The neighbor would have us believe that he can find traces of his invented fairy-tale kingdom in the poem Shade wrote. In a sense, he is right. The neighbor's occasions to talk with Shade did actually appear to spark in the poet some lines of thought to pursue in the poem. One salient example: the neighbor shares that his uncle once flew in airplane into the side of a building; this reminds Shade of the time he witnessed a bird, the waxwing, crash into a windowpane when Shade was just a boy--and this is the central image that sparks the poem! The influence runs the other way as well. Shade's preoccupation with his daughter's suicide leads our neighbor to reflect on his own suicidal thoughts. Shade's assassination leads our neighbor to make up a story about an attempt on his life.
These accidental influences make the story richer, and I'm grateful for Boyd for influencing me. Now as I read Pale Fire, I see it with fresh eyes. Thank you, Mister Boyd.