Elena Ferrante Popular Books

Elena Ferrante Biography & Facts

Elena Ferrante (Italian pronunciation: [ˈɛːlena ferˈrante]) is a pseudonymous Italian novelist. Ferrante's books, originally published in Italian, have been translated into many languages. Her four-book series of Neapolitan Novels are her most widely known works. Time magazine called Ferrante one of the 100 most influential people in 2016. Biography Not many facts are known about Elena Ferrante's biography due to the author's anonymity. She has claimed in interviews that she was born in Naples, the daughter of a seamstress, and that she has three sisters. Her knowledge of classical literature has also led critics to claim that she must have studied literature. Writing Early novels and Frantumaglia The first appearance of her work in English was the publication of a short story, "Delia's Elevator", translated by Adria Frizzi in the anthology After the War (2004). It narrates the movements of the title character on the day of her mother's burial, particularly her return to her safe retreat in the old elevator in the apartment building where she grew up. The story was later expanded into Ferrante's first novel, Troubling Love (in the original version, L'amore molesto), originally published in 1992. The novel follows protagonist Delia when she returns home following the mysterious death of her mother, a poor seamstress, who had been found drowned on an Italian beach, wearing nothing but a luxury bra. The novel was a critical success, and won the prestigious Premio Procida-Isola di Arturo Elsa Morante. In 2002, Ferrante published her second novel, The Days of Abandonment (in the original version, I giorni dell'abbandono). The novel tells the story of protagonist Olga, whose life unravels when her husband of 15 years abruptly tells her he is leaving her for a younger woman. Olga becomes haunted by the visions of abandoned women she saw as a child. The novel was also a huge success with Italian and international critics. Critic Janet Maslin, writing for The New York Times has said: "Both the novel's emotional and carnal candor are potent. Once Olga begins seeing herself as, in Simone de Beauvoir's words, a woman destroyed, she begins a downward spiral that includes hallucination, terror of poison and grim sexual self-abasement with her aging neighbor." In 2003, Ferrante published her first non-fiction book, La Frantumaglia, which was translated into English as Frantumaglia: A Writer's Journey in 2016. The book is a collection of essays and interviews, and it was republished several times to include content on her following novels. In 2006, Ferrante published her third novel, The Lost Daughter (in the original version, La figlia oscura). The novel follows Leda, a woman who is spending her vacations on an Italian beach, and becomes obsessed with a nearby Italian family, especially with a woman and her young daughter. That makes her think of her own time as a young mother, and the existential despair that led her to leave her family for two years. The book was later adapted as a film for Netflix in the directorial debut of Maggie Gyllenhaal. In 2007, she also published her first children's novel, La spiaggia di notte (translated into English by Ann Goldstein as The Beach at Night in 2016). The book tells the story of a doll who is forgotten on the beach at night. The Neapolitan Novels The Neapolitan Novels is a set of four novels published between 2011 and 2015. They tell the life story of two perceptive and intelligent girls, Lila and Lenu, born in Naples in 1944, who try to create lives for themselves within a violent and stultifying culture. The series consists of My Brilliant Friend (2012), The Story of a New Name (2013), Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay (2014), and The Story of the Lost Child (2015), which was nominated for the Strega Prize, the most prestigious Italian literary award, as well as the International Booker Prize. The fourth book of Ferrante's Neapolitan quartet, The Story of the Lost Child, appeared on The New York Times' 10 Best Books of 2015. In 2019, The Guardian ranked My Brilliant Friend the 11th best book since 2000. The overall series was also listed in Vulture as one of the 12 "New Classics" since 2000. Elissa Schappel, writing for Vanity Fair, reviewed the last book of the Quartet as "This is Ferrante at the height of her brilliance." Roger Cohen wrote for the New York Review of Books: "The interacting qualities of the two women are central to the quartet, which is at once introspective and sweeping, personal and political, covering the more than six decades of the two women's lives and the way those lives intersect with Italy's upheavals, from the revolutionary violence of the leftist Red Brigades to radical feminism." In The Guardian, it was noted the growing popularity of Ferrante, especially among writers: "Partly because her work describes domestic experiences – such as vivid sexual jealousy and other forms of shame – that are underexplored in fiction, Ferrante's reputation is soaring, especially among women (Zadie Smith, Mona Simpson and Jhumpa Lahiri are fans)". Darrin Franich has called the novels the series of the decade, saying: "The Neapolitan Novels are the series of the decade because they are so clearly of this decade: conflicted, revisionist, desperate, hopeful, revolutionary, euphorically feminine even in the face of assaultive male corrosion." Judith Shulevitz in The Atlantic, praised particularly how the books circle back to its start, to Lila and Lenu's childhood games, in the final installment. Maureen Corregan has also praised the ending of the novels, calling it "Perfect Devastation". Later work Her first novel after finishing the quartet, The Lying Life of Adults, was translated into English by Ann Goldstein and played with the stereotypical teenage-girl-coming-of-age structure. In 2019, Ferrante also published a book that collected her columns in the English newspaper The Guardian, entitled Incidental Inventions. The book was also published in Italian as L'invenzione occasionale. In 2022, she published In the Margins: On the Pleasures of Reading and Writing (in the original version I margini e il dettato), based on a series of lectures she wrote for the 2021 Umberto Eco lecture series, sponsored by the University of Bologna. The text was read by the Italian actress Manuela Mandracchia in the Arena del Sole, in Bologna, from 17 to 19 November, and streamed live. Anonymity Despite being recognized as a novelist on an international scale, Ferrante has kept her identity secret since the 1992 publication of her first novel. Speculation as to her true identity has been rife, and several theories, based on information Ferrante has given in interviews as well as analysis drawn from the content of her novels, have been put forth. Ferrante holds that "books, once they are written, have no need of their authors." She has repeatedly argued that anonymity is a precondition for her work and that keeping her true name out of t.... Discover the Elena Ferrante popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Elena Ferrante books.

Best Seller Elena Ferrante Books of 2024

  • Elective Affinities synopsis, comments

    Elective Affinities

    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe & R. J. Hollingdale

    Eduard and Charlotte are an aristocratic couple who live a harmonious but idle life in their estate. But the peace of their existence is thrown into chaos when two visitors Eduard...

  • El amor molesto synopsis, comments

    El amor molesto

    Elena Ferrante

    Una joya de la literatura contemporánea de la gran Elena Ferrante, la autora que ha fascinado a más de 20 millones de lectores en 42 países y es el mayor enimga de la literatura ac...

  • The Moon and the Bonfires synopsis, comments

    The Moon and the Bonfires

    Cesare Pavese & Tim Parks

    'Insinuating, haunting and lyrically pervasive' The New York Times Book ReviewA new translation by Tim ParksTwenty years after making his fortune in America, Eel is drawn back to t...

  • Ponti synopsis, comments

    Ponti

    Sharlene Teo

    An awardwinning novel about the value of friendships in presentday Singaporea “stirring debut…relatable yet unsettling [that] smartly captures earnest teenage myopathy through a tu...

  • Waiting for Bojangles synopsis, comments

    Waiting for Bojangles

    Olivier Bourdeaut

    An “oddball fairy tale” (The New York Times)shortlisted for one of France’s highest literary prizesa dark, funny, and wholly charming novel about a young boy and his eccentric fami...

  • The Lovers synopsis, comments

    The Lovers

    Paolo Cognetti & Stanley Luczkiw

    "A short novel of affecting elegance" –Vogue"Cognetti... delivers a beautiful meditation on nature, love, and renewal." –Publishers Weekly“A masterclass in highaltitude atmosphere,...

  • The World According to Anna synopsis, comments

    The World According to Anna

    Jostein Gaarder & Donald Bartlett

    When fifteenyearold Anna begins receiving messages from another time, her parents take her to the doctor. But he can find nothing wrong; in fact he believes there may be some truth...

  • The Decameron synopsis, comments

    The Decameron

    Giovanni Boccaccio & G. H. McWilliam

    In the summer of 1348, as the Black Death ravages their city, ten young Florentines take refuge in the countryside...Taken from the Greek, meaning 'tenday event', Boccaccio's Decam...

  • La hija oscura synopsis, comments

    La hija oscura

    Elena Ferrante

    Un brillante retrato de las ataduras de la maternidad, una joya de la literatura contemporánea de la gran Elena Ferrante, la autora que ha fascinado a más de 20 millones de lectore...

  • Cyrano de Bergerac synopsis, comments

    Cyrano de Bergerac

    Edmond Rostand

    Poet and soldier, brawler and charmer, Cyrano de Bergerac is desperately in love with Roxane, the most beautiful woman in Paris. But there is one very large problem he has a nose ...

  • The Years That Followed synopsis, comments

    The Years That Followed

    Catherine Dunne

    Acclaimed international bestseller Catherine Dunne’s thrilling US debut is the story of two wronged women bent on revenge at all costs, and “a pageturner that’s both poignant and s...

  • The Fell synopsis, comments

    The Fell

    Sarah Moss

    “A slim, tense pageturner . . . I gulped The Fell down in one sitting.”Emma Donoghue, author of The Pull of the StarsFrom the awardwinning author of Ghost Wall and Summerwater, Sar...

  • The Eight Mountains synopsis, comments

    The Eight Mountains

    Paolo Cognetti

    The book that inspired the film The Eight Mountains For fans of Elena Ferrante and Paulo Coelho comes a moving and elegant novel about the friendship between two young Italian boy...

  • The Castle in the Pyrenees synopsis, comments

    The Castle in the Pyrenees

    Jostein Gaarder

    Two former lovers are brought back together ... but can they really trust their pasts? The new novel from the bestselling author of SOPHIE'S WORLD.Through five intense years in the...

  • Forbidden Notebook synopsis, comments

    Forbidden Notebook

    Alba de Céspedes & Ann Goldstein

    A New York Times Notable Book of the Year “Powerful.” The New Yorker“Brilliant.” The Wall Street Journal"Astounding." NPR“Forceful, clear and morally engaged.” The Washington ...

  • The Frozen Heart synopsis, comments

    The Frozen Heart

    Almudena Grandes

    From the Spanish Maggie O'Farrell, a sweeping epic about the Spanish Civil War. 'A classy blockbuster a layered saga of family life, rivalry and redemption' GUARDIAN In the small ...

  • The Gaze synopsis, comments

    The Gaze

    Elif Shafak

    A beautiful and compelling novel, Elif Shafak's The Gaze considers the damage which can be inflicted by our simple desire to look at others"I didn't say anything. I didn't return h...

  • Eugene Onegin synopsis, comments

    Eugene Onegin

    Alexander Pushkin

    This novel in verse, said to be the parent of all Russian novels, is a tragic story of innocence, love and friendship. Eugene Onegin, an aristocrat, much like Pushkin and his peers...

  • The Vietri Project synopsis, comments

    The Vietri Project

    Nicola DeRobertis-Theye

    A Lithub, Good Reads, Bustle, and The Millions Most Anticipated Book of 2021"The Vietri Project is a riveting, shifting quest, an evocative trip to Rome, and a beautiful portr...

  • Lost in the Spanish Quarter synopsis, comments

    Lost in the Spanish Quarter

    Heddi Goodrich

    As seen in the New York Times Book Review. Set in the passionate, intense, and crumbling neighborhood known as the Spanish Quarter of Naples, comes a tale of two students...

  • The Orange Girl synopsis, comments

    The Orange Girl

    Jostein Gaarder

    From the author of SOPHIE'S WORLD, a modern fairy tale with a philosophical twist.'It should be read by all' VOGUE'My father died eleven years ago. I was only four then. I never th...

  • Elena Ferrante synopsis, comments

    Elena Ferrante

    Isabella Pinto

    All’incrocio tra critica letteraria e filosofia, il volume esplora la scrittura di Elena Ferrante e il rapporto tra soggettività e narrazione, individuando tre diverse partizioni. ...

  • Three Tales synopsis, comments

    Three Tales

    Gustave Flaubert & Roger Whitehouse

    First published in 1877, these three stories are dominated by questions of doubt, love, loneliness and religious experience, and together form a triumphant conclusion to Flaubert's...

  • Fallen synopsis, comments

    Fallen

    Lia Mills

    Fallen by Lia Mills a remarkable love story amidst the ruins of the First World War and the Easter RisingSpring, 1915. Katie Crilly gets the news she dreaded: her beloved twin bro...

  • Never the Wind synopsis, comments

    Never the Wind

    Francesco Dimitri

    A bittersweet gothic fantasy of family, friendship, memory, and the uncanny told from the perspective of a blind teenager in Puglia, Southern Italy, set in the same world as The Bo...

  • The Unprotected synopsis, comments

    The Unprotected

    Kelly Sokol

    A compelling debut novel exploring postpartum depressionfor readers of suspenseful women’s fiction and fans of Lionel Shriver’s We Need to Talk About Kevin.They say motherhood chan...

  • Spiritual Verses synopsis, comments

    Spiritual Verses

    The Jalaluddin Rumi & Alan Williams

    Begun in 1262 AD, Masnaviye Ma ‘navi, or ‘spiritual couplets', is thought to be the longest singleauthored ‘mystical’ poem ever written. As the spiritual masterpiece of the Persian...

  • Morning Sea synopsis, comments

    Morning Sea

    Margaret Mazzantini

    From the multiawardwinning author of Twice Born comes this dazzling, emotionally charged tale of two mothers’ fight to protect their children’s futuresWhen the water is safer than ...

  • Child of Fortune synopsis, comments

    Child of Fortune

    Yuko Tsushima & Geraldine Harcourt

    'A terrific novel' Angela CarterKoko won't do what is expected of her. Defying her family's wishes, she has brought up her elevenyearold daughter alone in her apartment. And now, a...

  • More Than You Can Say synopsis, comments

    More Than You Can Say

    Paul Torday

    The bestselling author of SALMON FISHING IN THE YEMEN returns with a Buchanesque thriller.'Torday has an extraordinary gift for making apparent "normality" look sinister and strang...

  • Her Side of the Story synopsis, comments

    Her Side of the Story

    Alba de Céspedes, Jill Foulston & Elena Ferrante

    “A courageous novel, beautifully imagined and written.” Elena Lappin, The Washington Post"De Cespedes' work has lost none of its subversive force”The New York Times Book Revie...

  • The Island synopsis, comments

    The Island

    Ana María Matute & Laura Lonsdale

    'This is an old and wicked island. An island of Phoenicians and merchants, of bloodsuckers and frauds'Expelled from her convent school for kicking the prioress, and abandoned by he...

  • The Lost Daughter of Venice synopsis, comments

    The Lost Daughter of Venice

    Charlotte Betts

    Come to Venice. Please, Phoebe, do not fail me.'Lingers in the heart long after the final page is turned . . . a must read for anyone who wants to be absorbed as well as utterly en...

  • Inishowen synopsis, comments

    Inishowen

    Joseph O'Connor

    From the bestselling author of Star of the Sea and Shadowplay, 'a powerful, moving adventure of raw fate and betrayed love' (Independent on Sunday).Inspector Martin Aitken's life i...

  • The Only Daughter synopsis, comments

    The Only Daughter

    A.B. Yehoshua & Stuart Schoffman

    “An oldfashioned book, free of cynicism, encroaching technology and intricate plotting, but imbued with a heartfelt and optimistic view of humanityin other words, a book filled wit...

  • Elena Ferrante synopsis, comments

    Elena Ferrante

    Viviana Scarinci

    Chi è Elena Ferrante? Una donna? Un uomo? Un gruppo di scrittori che da oltre un ventennio pubblicano a turno, o collaborando insieme, con questo pseudonimo? Oppure una scrittrice ...

  • Elena Ferrante synopsis, comments

    Elena Ferrante

    Fabiane Vertemati do Amaral Secches

    O livro "Elena Ferrante, uma longa experiência de ausência" acompanha os caminhos da misteriosa escritora italiana, desde a escolha do pseudônimo até a publicação de seu último rom...

  • The Book of Hidden Things synopsis, comments

    The Book of Hidden Things

    Francesco Dimitri

    From "one of the most significant figures of the last generation of fantasy", comes Francesco Dimitri's debut novel in English, an enthralling and seductive fantasy following four ...

  • Elena Ferrante synopsis, comments

    Elena Ferrante

    Salomon Malka

    Avec sa sagaL'Amie Prodigieuse, elle est l'une des autrices à avoir vendu le plus de romans ces dernières années... et pourtant personne ne sait qui se cache derrière le pseudonyme...

  • The Charterhouse of Parma synopsis, comments

    The Charterhouse of Parma

    Stendhal

    Headstrong and naïve, the young Italian aristocrat Fabrizio del Dongo is determined to defy the wrath of his rightwing father and go to war to fight for Napoleon. He stumbles on th...

  • One Hundred Saturdays synopsis, comments

    One Hundred Saturdays

    Michael Frank & Maira Kalman

    One of Wall Street Journal’s Ten Best Books of the Year Winner of the National Jewish Book Awards for Holocaust Memoir and Sephardic Culture Recipient of the Jewish Book Council’...