What I'm Reading: 'The Story of a New Name' by Elena Ferrante

As much as I enjoyed the first Neapolitan novel, My Brilliant Friend, I think I enjoyed The Story of a New Name even more; the novel picks up quite neatly at the ending of the first novel, with a particularly defining narrative moment in the lives of Lila and Lenu, an event which will very much set the tone and the narrative course for the second novel (I hope that isn't spoiler-y). The girls are now 16 and although their lives diverged in childhood when Lenu continued her education and Lila was forced to drop out of school, the divergence becomes that much more pronounced as they come of age along with the rest of their childhood playmates in their impoverished Italian neighborhood.

Ferrante's ability to write about adolescence is really striking, and I'm curious how an actual teenager would react to The Story of a New Name. The narrative is so meticulous and detailed and maybe the reason it feels like such an accomplishment to me is that I, like Ferrante, am an adult woman, looking back on her teenage experiences, and thus, I share her vision, whereas an actual teenager currently entrenched in the experience wouldn't relate to Lila and Lenu's experiences at all. Nevertheless, the coming of age of these characters who the reader has grown to know so intimately in My Brilliant Friend is an incredibly satisfying and rewarding experience that only comes from a really long, rich novel of this scope. Perhaps most significantly, we see the fictional Elena Greco and the real Elena Ferrante merge more and more, and every moment of realization at a shared trait only enhances the reading experience and feels like the discovery of some further treasure in a novel that is already so rich.

I have really fallen deeply in love with these novels; I purchased Book 3 on my Kindle within minutes of finishing The Story of a New Name, and the September 2015 publication date for Book 4 (the final novel) was just announced, so I am very ready to continue living in this world for a while longer.

What I'm Reading: 'My Brilliant Friend' by Elena Ferrante

I almost hate posting the above photo of the English edition cover of the first volume in the Neapolitan novels trilogy, because it motivated me to start reading e-books on my Kindle. It is a truly hideous book and proof of the adage that you cannot judge a book by the cover (but as an aside -- there is nothing wrong with a beautiful book, and whenever possible, isn't is preferable?).

My Brilliant Friend has the dubious honor of having re-energized my reading and getting me out of a bit of a slump, along with preventing my reading War and Peace very quickly. Elena Ferrante's trilogy about a lifelong friendship between two women has been on my radar for quite some time -- James Wood at The New Yorker is a huge advocate and the author has gotten a lot of buzz lately for being famously reclusive. Her identify is somewhat shrouded, causing the Italian press to speculate that 'Elena Ferrante' is the pen-name of a more established (male) Italian author. This is unfair and seems almost certainly untrue.

I've never read a better characterization of female friendship and more and more I'm realizing how much I enjoy books that explore this relationship. Maybe it's because I've been happily married for five years, but generally books that focus on romantic relationship don't do much for me -- they either focus on passionate and tempestuous relationships that are doomed, or on the numbness of prolonged monogamy, neither of which mean anything to me. But at this point in my life, relationships between women seem like the most dynamic and engaging, and as a reader it's what I'm drawn to.