Charles Nicol
Charles Nicol (1940 - 2020) is known primarily as an expert on the life and works of author Vladimir Nabokov,[1] and also writes widely on fiction (particularly science fiction and detective fiction) and popular culture. He was a retired Professor in the Department of English at Indiana State University.
Academic and Publishing History
Nicol published on Nabokov since 1967.[2] In 1970 he completed a PhD at Bowling Green State University with a dissertation on Vladimir Nabokov.[3] He was elected president of the International Vladimir Nabokov Society twice (including as its first president).[2] In 1984 he became a Fulbright senior lecturer.
He wrote for The American Spectator,[4] The Atlantic, The Baltimore Sun,[5] The Chicago Tribune,[6] Harper's Magazine,[7] The Kansas City Star, The National Review, The New York Times,[8] The Saturday Review,[4] Science Fiction Studies,[9] and The Washington Post.
Major works
- J.E. Rivers and Charles Nicol, Nabokov's Fifth Arc: Nabokov and Others on His Life's Work (1982)
- Charles Nicol and Gennady Barabtarlo, A small alpine form: studies in Nabokov's short fiction (1993)
References
- "Charles Nicol Nabokov articles from Google Scholar".
- Charles Nicol: Buzzwords and Dorophonemes. How Words Proliferate and Things Decay in Ada. In: Gavriel Shapiro: Nabokov at Cornell. Ithaca, N.Y. 2003
- Nicol, Charles David. Types of Formal Structure in Selected Novels of Vladimir Nabokov. Ph.D. thesis, Bowling Green State University, 1970.
- "UNZ Available Works by Charles Nicol".
- "Baggott's 'Madam': nuns, hustlers, show people".
- "Mark Twain's Alchemy". Chicago Tribune. 1993-06-20.
- "Harper's Articles by Charles Nicol".
- Nicol, Charles (1988-05-01). "Thinking Gives Eugene A Headache". The New York Times.
- "Science Fiction Studies articles by Charles Nicol". Archived from the original on 2012-12-14. Retrieved 2011-02-09.