It’s been 50 years since Vladimir Nabokov penned Lolita, but the tale of a pedophile and his “nymphet” stepdaughter remains as baldly shocking and strangely moving as the day it was published. In fact, it’s one of the top-selling books of all time. Some scholars suggest that it is Nabokov’s unquestionably beautiful way with language that attracts us and gives his book such lasting appeal. But there may also be a darker obsession with underaged children as sex objects hiding beneath the surface of our literary interest. “How is it that a pedophile protagonist remains sympathetic enough to draw audiences? Why does this backward fairy tale — Prince Charming as a monster — endure?”