An article on the Sassi di Matera (the stone homes/cave dwellings in Puglia, Italy) in this weekend's Globe and Mail Travel section reminded me that I'd just learned about these remarkable buildings and the culture and people they sheltered for forty thousand years. I came across them in the book I'd promised to tell you more about, Paul Paolicelli's Dances with Luigi. Since I wrote that promise here, I've finished reading a few other titles I need to say a few words about here, so yes, I'm falling behind again.
Luckily, though, I have a couple of guest bloggers ready to jump in for me. If you are one of the small but select group of readers here, I hope you take time to read the comments, which are often the richest part of a post. We have a salon of discerning readers here, and there are a few consistent voices you may have begun to recognise. Last fall, as it became increasingly obvious I might never find the time to write as much about Elana Ferrante's marvelous Neapolitan series as it deserves, I reached out to two of these commenters, Dottoressa and Georgia, to ask if they'd care to write a response to Ferrante.
Both of them kindly agreed, and while I'd initially thought to put their contributions together in a single post, it seems more appropriate to give a separate space to Georgia's post, as she's offered us an engaging introduction to Ferrante's earlier work. For any of you who are hesitating about making the commitment to a four-volume series, or for those of you (like myself) who, having read the Neapolitan series, now wish to read Ferrante's backlist, here is Georgia's compelling introduction for those titles -- she thoughtfully provided the photograph above as well.
Thank
you so much, Mater, for asking for my thoughts on the earlier translated novels
of Elena Ferrante.
A
little background on me: I am/was an accountant, recently retired from a
government management position, a reader, a traveller, art lover, gardener,
animal lover (not the anthropomorphising kind) and mother of two grown
children. I am a faithful reader of Mater's two blogs and have taken great
enjoyment from the community there.
Last
summer, when I realized I had written 'Elena Ferrante' several times in a
notebook I keep for such reminders, I decided I should take action! I started
with the local library intending to place holds on the first books in the
Neapolitan series and resigned to a long wait.
I found there were three earlier books available, so I checked them
out...and away I went.
Troubling
Love (1999), Days of Abandonment (2002), and The Lost Daughter (2006) are small
books (no more than 200 pages), each focusing on a female protagonist: Delia,
Olga and Leda respectively. Delia sets
out to solve the mystery of her mother's sudden death. Olga copes with the
aftermath of her husband unexpectedly abandoning the family for a younger
woman. Leda, well...Leda takes a
vacation, she meets a large extended family who are holidaying in the same
area, and she thinks a lot.
I
haven't read much Italian fiction but I did watch a number of Italian movies
when I was studying the language, in hopes hearing spoken Italian would help
me. (It didn't really, because of the
subtitles. I can read more quickly than
I can translate what I hear.) Those movies often had a particular style,
though, a kind of bleakness and introspection that I recognized in Ferrante's
novels. In fact, a few pages into Days
of Abandonment, I realized I had seen the movie version I giorni
dell'abbandono a number of years ago.
I
have read My Brilliant Friend, and have the next two of the series waiting on
the night table, but have held off so as not to influence my comments here.
There are some themes that recur...the search for identity in the context of
the influence of those who are in, or have been in our lives, whether wanted or
not. And smaller recognizable things: a
frightening man in the neighbourhood.
Nicknames. A cellar. But although the earlier books have the essence
of the later novels, the rich world Ferrante later created is not there.
Because
we see Delia, Olga and Leda through their own self-critical eyes, I didn't find
them particularly likeable. (I will confess I lost patience with them
frequently.) They have stories to tell, though. And if anything in their
stories bears a resemblance to something in your story, you might find a
connection here. One passage from The Lost Daughter rang so true for me it left
me absolutely shaken. Leda is dreaming of pursuing her own life, away from her
family:
"...I couldn't settle down;
instead, a kind of disorder took over my imagination. With my husband I was silent; I never tried to violate
our sexual habits, not even the erotic slang we
had developed over the years. But as I studied, did the shopping, stood in line
to pay a bill, I would become lost in
desires that embarrassed and at the same time excited me. I was ashamed of them, especially when they intervened
while I was taking care of the
children. I sang songs with them, read them fables before they fell asleep,
helped (my younger daughter)
eat, washed them, dressed them, and meanwhile I felt unworthy, I couldn't figure out how to calm
myself."
I
have never read something before that came as close to what was going on inside
me at a particular time in my life. I was on the bus the first time I read this
and sat looking out the window for a while with the feeling I had narrowly
escaped something. I am sure my heart was pounding, because it pounded again
when I located the passage to quote it here.
I
did eventually come to my senses, but I will leave Leda's fate, and Olga's, and
Delia's, for you to discover. I'm going to settle in with The Story of a New
Name...
Thank you so much, Georgia! What a great introduction to your own interest in Italian language, culture, and literature as well as to Ferrante and her work, and what a bravely chosen passage to convincingly illustrate what Ferrante can do to us, in her unflinching determination to write women's lives, beyond the mythically domestic mothers and wives we are too often purported (constructed) to be...
I have Dottoressa's response to the 4-volume Neapolitan series and I'll do my best to post this soon, along with a few words of my own (at the very least, some links back to what I said about these books earlier). And who knows? Perhaps I'll even catch up on keeping a promise or two and recording a few titles. Already February and falling behind?! Tsk, tsk, tsk. . .
Readers, as always, your comments are very welcome, and I think Georgia will probably be available and willing to answer any questions you might have, but I'll be here as well, facilitating the conversation if needed.
Thank you so much, Georgia! What a great introduction to your own interest in Italian language, culture, and literature as well as to Ferrante and her work, and what a bravely chosen passage to convincingly illustrate what Ferrante can do to us, in her unflinching determination to write women's lives, beyond the mythically domestic mothers and wives we are too often purported (constructed) to be...
I have Dottoressa's response to the 4-volume Neapolitan series and I'll do my best to post this soon, along with a few words of my own (at the very least, some links back to what I said about these books earlier). And who knows? Perhaps I'll even catch up on keeping a promise or two and recording a few titles. Already February and falling behind?! Tsk, tsk, tsk. . .
Readers, as always, your comments are very welcome, and I think Georgia will probably be available and willing to answer any questions you might have, but I'll be here as well, facilitating the conversation if needed.