You might remember the Police referring to “that book by Nabokov.” Well this isn’t it. It’s an earlier book about a Russian immigrant.
With special guest Longinus, the boys drink and review “Dance of Days” IPA by Atlas Brew Works, then take on Vladimir Nabokov’s Pnin — a novel that’s equal parts frustrating, funny, and quietly devastating.
At first glance, Timofey Pnin looks like a classic “nice guy who finishes last”: awkward, socially out of place, and constantly overlooked. But as we dig deeper, the question becomes harder to answer. Is Pnin really a loser, or is he one of the only genuinely decent people in the story?
We explore:
- Whether Pnin is a victim of others… or of the narrator himself
- The role of the unreliable narrator and what it does to your perception of the story
- The strange structure of the novel—more like a series of vignettes than a traditional plot
- The tension between Pnin’s outward awkwardness and the profound suffering underneath
- Why this might be a book you appreciate more after reading it than while reading it
We also wrestle with a bigger question: what’s the relationship between intelligence, social success, and moral worth?
And of course, we start with a beer.
If you’ve ever struggled through a “classic” and wondered what you were missing, this one’s for you.
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