Your rating:
In this third Neapolitan novel, Elena and Lila, the two girls whom readers first met in My Brilliant Friend, have become women. Lila married at sixteen and has a young son; she has left her abusive husband and now works as a common laborer. Elena has left the neighborhood, earned her college degree, and published a successful novel, all of which have opened the doors to a world of learned interlocutors and richly furnished salons. Both women have pushed against the walls of a prison that would have seen them living a life of misery, ignorance, and submission. They are afloat on the great sea of opportunities that opened up during the nineteen-seventies. Yet they are still very much bound to each other by a strong, unbreakable bond.
No posts yet
Kick off the convo with a theory, question, musing, or update
Your rating:
It's a little painful to see their friendship be stunted for a while. It's also painful to see every single marriage in this book be like...a constant discovery of "oh, who did I really marry..."
It's painful to see Lena go through motherhood,lose her sense of self, her writing. Man this one was a painful and necessary piece of their life.