Speak, Memory

memoir by Nabokov
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Also known as: “Conclusive Evidence: A Memoir”, “Drugiye berega”, “Speak, Memory: An Autobiography Revisited”

Speak, Memory, autobiographical memoir of his early life and European years by Vladimir Nabokov. Fifteen chapters were published individually (1948–50), mainly in The New Yorker. The book was originally published as Conclusive Evidence: A Memoir (1951); it was also published the same year as Speak, Memory: A Memoir. Nabokov translated into Russian and revised the original work as Drugiye berega (“Other Shores”) in 1954; in 1966 he published a further revised and expanded English-language edition titled Speak, Memory: An Autobiography Revisited, which contains family photographs and incorporates recollections and revisions by his sisters and cousins.

The memoir describes in the first 12 chapters Nabokov’s happy childhood in an aristocratic family in St. Petersburg, Russia. The remaining three chapters cover his years as a university student at Cambridge and as an intellectual and fledgling writer in the Russian émigré communities of Berlin and Paris.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kathleen Kuiper.