Vladimir Nabokov

Johnson, Kurt, and Steven L. Coates. Nabokov's Blues: The Scientific Odyssey of a Literary Genius. 1999

Bibliographic title
Nabokov's Blues: The Scientific Odyssey of a Literary Genius
Page(s)
372
Publication year
Comment

See also DBJ's note on this book from NABKV-L. Chapter 1 available in Zembla.

Abstract
Vladimir Nabokov had no formal training in biology, but during the 1940s he was an acknowledged expert on "Blues," a family of butterflies that inhabit some of the remotest parts of Latin and South America. In 1945 he published a radical new classification of Blues, a paper that initially caused a stir in the rarified field of lepidoptery. However, it was fifty years before scientists followed up on his pioneering work. Part biography and part detective story, "Nabokov's Blues" explores the rich and varied place butterflies hold in Nabokov's fiction, as well as far-reaching questions of bio-geography and evolution, and the worldwide crisis of ecology and biodiversity.