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Report on "Приглашение на казнь" (Invitation to a Beheading) 1. Context and Origin Vladimir Nabokov.

Often categorized as an aesthetic anti-utopia or surrealist/existentialist fiction. It shares themes with Kafka’s work, though Nabokov claimed he had not read Kafka at the time of writing. 2. Plot Summary in 1959. The novel follows

Later translated into English by the author and his son, Dmitri Nabokov, in 1959. in 1959. The novel follows

The novel follows , a man imprisoned and sentenced to death for the crime of "gnostical turpitude" (sometimes translated as "gnostic villainy"). in 1959. The novel follows

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