When the estate of Vladimir Nabokov announced that the great writer's final, unfinished novel, The Original of Laura, would be published in November, it put an end to years of speculation. At last, we would know how much of the book, which Nabokov was working on when he died in 1977, existed (answer: 138 index cards' worth - Nabokov wrote all his novels on index cards) and whether it was true that it explored similar themes to his most famous novel, Lolita. Published by Penguin in the UK and Knopf in the US, the book will reproduce facsimiles of the cards with a transcript of the text on the facing page.
It all sounds pretty straightforward. But it hasn't been, not by a long shot. As recently as this time last year, Nabokov's literary executor, his son Dmitri, was threatening to burn the cards. He gave two reasons for this. One, his father had asked him to destroy them on his deathbed. Two, Dmitri felt protective towards the book and disliked the idea of it being pored over by critics, especially the critics he calls "Lolitologists", who favour the kind of psychoanalytical readings that his father particularly disliked. (Nabokov's response when asked by an interviewer why he hated Freud so much is worth quoting in full: "I think he's crude, I think he's medieval, and I don't want an elderly gentleman from Vienna with an umbrella inflicting his dreams upon me.")
So what happened to make Dmitri change his mind? Perhaps the 74-year-old former opera singer needed the money, or (unlikely) felt suddenly, overwhelmingly guilty about the Nabokov fans he'd spent years teasing by calling The Original of Laura - a book he alone had read - "brilliant, original and potentially radical" and "the most concentrated distillation of [my father's] creativity". Actually, no: his father's ghost told him to do it. "I'm a loyal son and thought long and hard about it," Dmitri explained, "then my father appeared before me and said, with an ironic grin: 'You're stuck in a right old mess - just go ahead and publish!'"
Would that the issues surrounding posthumous publication were always resolved so easily. Alas, supernatural intervention is rare. As Simon Prosser, publisher at the prestigious Penguin UK imprint Hamish Hamilton, points out: "Some writers die having left strict instructions that all their unpublished writing - including notes, letters and diaries - be destroyed, and some literary executors may make the very difficult decision to override that. Others die having left no clear instructions at all, and some may have died leaving apparently conflicting instructions. I think you have to take each case individually and reach a conclusion based on the advice of those closest to the writer - the family and friends who knew him or her best."
When the bestselling thriller writer Michael Crichton died of cancer last November, he left at least one finished novel, Pirate Latitudes, and one-third of a second that will be finished by a writer to be chosen by Crichton's agent. (There is a precedent for this: Dorothy L Sayers' final Lord Peter Wimsey novel, Thrones, Dominations, was completed by Jill Paton Walsh. The result was mostly judged to be a success.) The Chilean-born novelist Roberto Bolaño died of liver failure shortly after sending his editor a first draft of 2666, his extraordinarily complex, 1,000-page-long inquiry into a series of brutal serial killings. That he was never able to give it a final polish didn't blight its reception - it was hailed as a masterpiece by just about everyone. Compare this to the recent uproar in France over the publication of the late literary theorist Roland Barthes' Journal de deuil (Bereavement Diary). His friend and former editor François Wahl told Le Monde that Barthes, who died in 1980 after being hit by a laundry van, would have been "positively revolted" by the dissemination of his pained musings on his mother's death and said its publication "violated his privacy".
Perhaps it did. But wouldn't it be great to be able to read Byron's diaries - burned by his publisher John Murray to protect the poet's reputation (and the world from their scandalous contents)? And what of all the great books, bona fide literary classics, that we wouldn't have if their authors' wishes had been respected? Virgil requested that The Aeneid be burned. Franz Kafka's literary executor, Max Brod, ignored the writer's stipulation in his will that all his work be destroyed after his death in 1924. (When asked why he had seemingly betrayed his friend, Brod replied: "Franz should have appointed another executor if he had been absolutely and finally determined that his instructions should stand.")
Mary-Anne Harrington, the associate publisher at Headline Review, invokes what she calls the Suite Française argument (referring to the posthumously published novel by Irène Némirovsky) to cover this sort of scenario. "A book that good deserves to be out there," she says, but adds that completeness is an issue: "No shoddy first drafts should end up in print."
For some, this is one of the problems with The Original of Laura. Nabokov was a perfectionist who would have hated the idea of his unfinished work being in circulation. Yet this prompts the questions: why did he not burn the cards before he died? And why did his wife, Vera, who died in 1991, not burn them when she realised he hadn't? The American literary critic Ron Rosenbaum raised some broader issues when he asked in Slate magazine: "Does the greatness of an artist diminish his right to dispose of his own unfinished work?" It's a question that's fun to ponder - but no practical help.
Writers are predictably divided on whether Dmitri has done the right thing. Speaking to The Times of London in 2008, John Banville said that the work should be published. But Tom Stoppard, in the same piece, took the opposing view: "Nabokov wanted it burned, so burn it. There is no superior imperative." Matt Thorne, whose Cherry was longlisted for the 2004 Man Booker Prize, admits he's torn on the whole business: "It seems fairly clear from everything we know that Nabokov would not want this book to be published, but as a reader I can't wait to read it. From what I've heard, it's unlikely to be a lost masterpiece, but I do prefer Nabokov's later books to his early ones and would like to know what direction he was going in when he died as he was still at the top of his game." What about the device of reproducing the novel as a manuscript facsimile? Does flaunting its incompleteness make any kind of moral difference? Thorne thinks not - "though it might have done if they'd published it as index cards in a box".
Thorne says he would hate the idea of anyone seeing his half-written books: "I wouldn't want readers to see them in that state." Deborah Moggach, the author of the bestselling Tulip Fever, agrees: "The thought of anyone reading, let alone publishing, a work-in-progress turns my bowels to water. It's only the endless rewriting that makes something halfway good, and if people could see the banal, clunky, horribly embarrassing earlier versions I would die of shame. No - let The Original of Laura rest in peace. Besides, the whole thing reeks of exploitation."
The case of David Foster Wallace, however, is subtly, crucially different. Wallace killed himself in September 2008, 14 years after the publication of his last novel, the enormous Infinite Jest. Two hundred draft pages of a novel to be called The Pale King were found two months later by his wife, Karen Green, when she was clearing out the garage he used as a study.
Set in a tax office in the American Midwest, The Pale King is a novel about choice and how we construct meaning out of the random data the world flings at us. It will be published in the UK by Prosser at Hamish Hamilton, home to writers such as Zadie Smith and Hari Kunzru. Prosser says he decided to publish based on the advice of those closest to Wallace, including Green; his long-term editor in America, Michael Peitch; and his agent, Bonnie Nadell. "I trust them to have made the best decision based on all the evidence available to them," he says. "Having read a substantial part of the manuscript myself, I'm certain that publishing it is in the public and academic interest. It's probably the strongest new writing I've read in five years."
The "academic interest" argument is compelling here, as it is for Nabokov. The Pale King was a new type of book for Wallace - a move away from his trademark maximalist style towards something tauter and more streamlined. The tragedy in his case is that the difficulties he was having completing the book to his satisfaction may have contributed to his death. A manic depressive, Wallace had been trying to wean himself off his medication so that he could finish The Pale King "with a clean brain". Reading what exists of the novel with this knowledge - that it was written with what its author considered a "dirty" brain, a brain that was impeding him - will be a bittersweet experience for fans.
Then again, if the material is bad, in a sense these books don't matter. They will remain curios; appendices to a canon rather than integral to it. It's interesting to consider examples from other media. Stanley Kubrick's AI, developed and directed by Steven Spielberg after the Eyes Wide Shut director's death, worked neither as a Kubrick film nor as a Spielberg film. When Jimi Hendrix died, the producer Alan Douglas took unfinished and damaged tracks that the guitarist had been working on and, using session musicians, "completed" them to create a sequence of posthumous albums, the most successful of which was 1975's Crash Landing. But no one really listens to them today, for the simple reason that they sound terrible.
That is the debate in a nutshell: why, if you're not a Nabokov scholar, waste valuable time reading The Original of Laura when you can read Pale Fire? We'll have to wait until November for a satisfactory answer.
Dirham Stretcher tips for having a baby in the UAE
Selma Abdelhamid, the group's moderator, offers her guide to guide the cost of having a young family:
• Buy second hand stuff
They grow so fast. Don't get a second hand car seat though, unless you 100 per cent know it's not expired and hasn't been in an accident.
• Get a health card and vaccinate your child for free at government health centres
Ms Ma says she discovered this after spending thousands on vaccinations at private clinics.
• Join mum and baby coffee mornings provided by clinics, babysitting companies or nurseries.
Before joining baby classes ask for a free trial session. This way you will know if it's for you or not. You'll be surprised how great some classes are and how bad others are.
• Once baby is ready for solids, cook at home
Take the food with you in reusable pouches or jars. You'll save a fortune and you'll know exactly what you're feeding your child.
The 15 players selected
Muzzamil Afridi, Rahman Gul, Rizwan Haider (Dezo Devils); Shahbaz Ahmed, Suneth Sampath (Glory Gladiators); Waqas Gohar, Jamshaid Butt, Shadab Ahamed (Ganga Fighters); Ali Abid, Ayaz Butt, Ghulam Farid, JD Mahesh Kumara (Hiranni Heros); Inam Faried, Mausif Khan, Ashok Kumar (Texas Titans
TO A LAND UNKNOWN
Director: Mahdi Fleifel
Starring: Mahmoud Bakri, Aram Sabbah, Mohammad Alsurafa
Rating: 4.5/5
Where to donate in the UAE
The Emirates Charity Portal
You can donate to several registered charities through a “donation catalogue”. The use of the donation is quite specific, such as buying a fan for a poor family in Niger for Dh130.
The General Authority of Islamic Affairs & Endowments
The site has an e-donation service accepting debit card, credit card or e-Dirham, an electronic payment tool developed by the Ministry of Finance and First Abu Dhabi Bank.
Al Noor Special Needs Centre
You can donate online or order Smiles n’ Stuff products handcrafted by Al Noor students. The centre publishes a wish list of extras needed, starting at Dh500.
Beit Al Khair Society
Beit Al Khair Society has the motto “From – and to – the UAE,” with donations going towards the neediest in the country. Its website has a list of physical donation sites, but people can also contribute money by SMS, bank transfer and through the hotline 800-22554.
Dar Al Ber Society
Dar Al Ber Society, which has charity projects in 39 countries, accept cash payments, money transfers or SMS donations. Its donation hotline is 800-79.
Dubai Cares
Dubai Cares provides several options for individuals and companies to donate, including online, through banks, at retail outlets, via phone and by purchasing Dubai Cares branded merchandise. It is currently running a campaign called Bookings 2030, which allows people to help change the future of six underprivileged children and young people.
Emirates Airline Foundation
Those who travel on Emirates have undoubtedly seen the little donation envelopes in the seat pockets. But the foundation also accepts donations online and in the form of Skywards Miles. Donated miles are used to sponsor travel for doctors, surgeons, engineers and other professionals volunteering on humanitarian missions around the world.
Emirates Red Crescent
On the Emirates Red Crescent website you can choose between 35 different purposes for your donation, such as providing food for fasters, supporting debtors and contributing to a refugee women fund. It also has a list of bank accounts for each donation type.
Gulf for Good
Gulf for Good raises funds for partner charity projects through challenges, like climbing Kilimanjaro and cycling through Thailand. This year’s projects are in partnership with Street Child Nepal, Larchfield Kids, the Foundation for African Empowerment and SOS Children's Villages. Since 2001, the organisation has raised more than $3.5 million (Dh12.8m) in support of over 50 children’s charities.
Noor Dubai Foundation
Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum launched the Noor Dubai Foundation a decade ago with the aim of eliminating all forms of preventable blindness globally. You can donate Dh50 to support mobile eye camps by texting the word “Noor” to 4565 (Etisalat) or 4849 (du).
India squads
T20: Rohit Sharma (c), Shikhar Dhawan, KL Rahul, Sanju Samson, Shreyas Iyer, Manish Pandey, Rishabh Pant, Washington Sundar, Krunal Pandya, Yuzvendra Chahal, Rahul Chahar, Deepak Chahar, Khaleel Ahmed, Shivam Dube, Shardul Thakur
Test: Virat Kohli (c), Rohit Sharma, Mayank Agarwal, Cheteshwar Pujara, Ajinkya Rahane, Hanuma Vihari, Wriddhiman Saha (wk), Ravindra Jadeja, Ravichandran Ashwin, Kuldeep Yadav, Mohammed Shami, Umesh Yadav, Ishant Sharma, Shubman Gill, Rishabh Pant
The National Archives, Abu Dhabi
Founded over 50 years ago, the National Archives collects valuable historical material relating to the UAE, and is the oldest and richest archive relating to the Arabian Gulf.
Much of the material can be viewed on line at the Arabian Gulf Digital Archive - https://www.agda.ae/en
The specs: 2019 Audi A7 Sportback
Price, base: Dh315,000
Engine: 3.0-litre V6
Transmission: Seven-speed automatic
Power: 335hp @ 5,000rpm
Torque: 500Nm @ 1,370rpm
Fuel economy 5.9L / 100km
ESSENTIALS
The flights
Fly Etihad or Emirates from the UAE to Moscow from 2,763 return per person return including taxes.
Where to stay
Trips on the Golden Eagle Trans-Siberian cost from US$16,995 (Dh62,414) per person, based on two sharing.
Schedule:
Pakistan v Sri Lanka:
28 Sep-2 Oct, 1st Test, Abu Dhabi
6-10 Oct, 2nd Test (day-night), Dubai
13 Oct, 1st ODI, Dubai
16 Oct, 2nd ODI, Abu Dhabi
18 Oct, 3rd ODI, Abu Dhabi
20 Oct, 4th ODI, Sharjah
23 Oct, 5th ODI, Sharjah
26 Oct, 1st T20I, Abu Dhabi
27 Oct, 2nd T20I, Abu Dhabi
29 Oct, 3rd T20I, Lahore
The more serious side of specialty coffee
While the taste of beans and freshness of roast is paramount to the specialty coffee scene, so is sustainability and workers’ rights.
The bulk of genuine specialty coffee companies aim to improve on these elements in every stage of production via direct relationships with farmers. For instance, Mokha 1450 on Al Wasl Road strives to work predominantly with women-owned and -operated coffee organisations, including female farmers in the Sabree mountains of Yemen.
Because, as the boutique’s owner, Garfield Kerr, points out: “women represent over 90 per cent of the coffee value chain, but are woefully underrepresented in less than 10 per cent of ownership and management throughout the global coffee industry.”
One of the UAE’s largest suppliers of green (meaning not-yet-roasted) beans, Raw Coffee, is a founding member of the Partnership of Gender Equity, which aims to empower female coffee farmers and harvesters.
Also, globally, many companies have found the perfect way to recycle old coffee grounds: they create the perfect fertile soil in which to grow mushrooms.
Company profile
Name: Steppi
Founders: Joe Franklin and Milos Savic
Launched: February 2020
Size: 10,000 users by the end of July and a goal of 200,000 users by the end of the year
Employees: Five
Based: Jumeirah Lakes Towers, Dubai
Financing stage: Two seed rounds – the first sourced from angel investors and the founders' personal savings
Second round raised Dh720,000 from silent investors in June this year
We Weren’t Supposed to Survive But We Did
We weren’t supposed to survive but we did.
We weren’t supposed to remember but we did.
We weren’t supposed to write but we did.
We weren’t supposed to fight but we did.
We weren’t supposed to organise but we did.
We weren’t supposed to rap but we did.
We weren’t supposed to find allies but we did.
We weren’t supposed to grow communities but we did.
We weren’t supposed to return but WE ARE.
Amira Sakalla
Where to buy
Limited-edition art prints of The Sofa Series: Sultani can be acquired from Reem El Mutwalli at www.reemelmutwalli.com
Elvis
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Tax authority targets shisha levy evasion
The Federal Tax Authority will track shisha imports with electronic markers to protect customers and ensure levies have been paid.
Khalid Ali Al Bustani, director of the tax authority, on Sunday said the move is to "prevent tax evasion and support the authority’s tax collection efforts".
The scheme’s first phase, which came into effect on 1st January, 2019, covers all types of imported and domestically produced and distributed cigarettes. As of May 1, importing any type of cigarettes without the digital marks will be prohibited.
He said the latest phase will see imported and locally produced shisha tobacco tracked by the final quarter of this year.
"The FTA also maintains ongoing communication with concerned companies, to help them adapt their systems to meet our requirements and coordinate between all parties involved," he said.
As with cigarettes, shisha was hit with a 100 per cent tax in October 2017, though manufacturers and cafes absorbed some of the costs to prevent prices doubling.
How to help
Send “thenational” to the following numbers or call the hotline on: 0502955999
2289 – Dh10
2252 – Dh 50
6025 – Dh20
6027 – Dh 100
6026 – Dh 200
How it works
A $10 hand-powered LED light and battery bank
Device is operated by hand cranking it at any time during the day or night
The charge is stored inside a battery
The ratio is that for every minute you crank, it provides 10 minutes light on the brightest mode
A full hand wound charge is of 16.5minutes
This gives 1.1 hours of light on high mode or 2.5 hours of light on low mode
When more light is needed, it can be recharged by winding again
The larger version costs between $18-20 and generates more than 15 hours of light with a 45-minute charge
No limit on how many times you can charge
MO
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Terror attacks in Paris, November 13, 2015
- At 9.16pm, three suicide attackers killed one person outside the Atade de France during a foootball match between France and Germany
- At 9.25pm, three attackers opened fire on restaurants and cafes over 20 minutes, killing 39 people
- Shortly after 9.40pm, three other attackers launched a three-hour raid on the Bataclan, in which 1,500 people had gathered to watch a rock concert. In total, 90 people were killed
- Salah Abdeslam, the only survivor of the terrorists, did not directly participate in the attacks, thought to be due to a technical glitch in his suicide vest
- He fled to Belgium and was involved in attacks on Brussels in March 2016. He is serving a life sentence in France
DIVINE%20INTERVENTOIN
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