Elana Ferrante (1999 [2016]) Troubling Love.
Posted by celticman on Sat, 10 Dec 2016
What attracted me to Elana Ferrante’s short, debut, novel was her refusal to publicise her books and the belief that a –good – book would find an audience. It seems counterintuitive, but the purity of such belief is hard to argue with, even though if I hadn’t read about her in the Observer Review, I wouldn’t know who she was and would not have read or written this review of her book. Twenty or thirty films in English are being sold to us every week, with millions spent on advertising, sometimes as much as a third of the budget and, the poor relations, tens of thousands of books also waiting to be read and demanding our attention. But Ferrante has talked the talk and walked the walk, so you can’t argue with success. I admit a bit of Catholic guilt here, wishing it was me and not her, but hey, I’m no saint, and Troubling Love might simply be the realisation your book is no damn good.
A death is always a good starting point for a novel especially a mother’s death.
‘I had only an impression of losing altitude, like an aged Alice in pursuit of the White Rabbit…’ in pursuit of her mother, who has apparently committed suicide, her father, who was separated from her mother and her mother’s apparent lover – from the past – the dapper old man, Caserta, whom forty years before, when Deila had been five, had told her father she’d seen them having sex in the basement of Caserta’s father’s shop in Naples, which led to a Vesuvius eruption of recrimination and violence that haunted the little girl her whole life. The mystery of who we are and what we have become. A Bildungsroman in reverse gear.
‘I remember everything, or almost everything. Only the words are missing.’ Memory is a tricky beast, qualified by time and experience, ‘I remembered but I cannot tell myself’.
The question then becomes what is the unreliable narrator hiding from herself and the reader? A journey into the past becomes a journey into the present and the trouble with love is it is fickle and often unfaithful, welling up, but unwilling to be held.
Naples is not what it was, but Delia is native, surefooted in following her mother’s footsteps prior to her suicide, and unravelling her apparently strange behaviour in a denouement that arranges the whys to become the guilty secret of ‘I’.
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CM I have enjoyed some of
CM I have enjoyed some of Elena Ferrante's fiction recently. 'My Brilliant Friend' and 'Those who
Leave and Those who Stay' are IMO the good ones of a rather uneven saga set in Naples which follows the fortunes of a number of families in a run-down part of Naples over a period of about 50 years ending with the here and now. I have a liking for fiction which is set outside England.
I've got The Days of
I've got The Days of Abandonment to tackle next, and her collected letters to see what she's thinking. My Brilliant Friend, probably her best known work, I'll certainly look at. I was interested to here comparisons with Zadie Smith, another author I'm not overly familiar with.
She is nothing like Zadie
She is nothing like Zadie Smith. Different settings and a different writing style. I also like Zadie Smith and have read White Teeth - her 'growing-up' tale and On Beauty her more mature work of fiction which I feel has the edge. I have never met Zadie but she grew up about 3 miles from myself in Queens Park - another middle-class woman writer from the People's Republic of Brent
good to know elsie, I've got
good to know elsie, I've got Zadie Smith the Authentic Man lying about so will have a look. It's not the People's Republic of Brent that worries me, but the People's Repulbic of Trump.
Yeh, Nellie the Elephant
Yeh, Nellie the Elephant off he goes with a trumpetty trumpetty aargh... let's not go there