Publishers Weekly interviews the mysterious Elena Ferrante

In a rare interview, Italian author Elena Ferrante talks about My Brilliant Friend, the first in a trilogy that takes main characters and best friends Lila and Elena from childhood to old age.

This first volume ends with Elena and Lila aged 16. How did you decide where to break the trilogy into its constituent parts?


My Brilliant Friend
 is dense with detail: though the focus is always Elena and Lila, their world is never just background, indeed, it has an almost tactile quality.I consider My Brilliant Friend a single novel that, because of its length—the story spans the second half of the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st—is being published in several volumes. Formally speaking, the division was dictated by the phases according to which convention demarcates individual lives: childhood, adolescence, youth, maturity, old age. In truth, the flow of the narration is subject to a more profound division: Each volume ends when the two main characters seem, on one hand, to have fully exhausted a phase of their friendship, and, on the other, are about to be buffeted by external events that will change everything.

Anything bearing the moniker “literary” has a duty to make readers see, feel, touch, smell, and taste the worlds it describes. “Represent” means to make something present, to place something before the eyes of readers, to make it immediate: homes, entire towns, open spaces, single individuals, the community to which those individuals belong and with which they enter into conflict. It’s not a question of banal attention to detail, to background, or to setting. An individual’s story comes from adhesion to a specific world, the world from which that individual emerged and with which she is in conflict. Narratively speaking, without the concreteness of the world that he carries within, and that pushes against him from without, a character is only a hollow shade.

The book is set in Naples, where you’re from, and the narrator, who’s shown turning on her computer to write this story, bears your first name. What interested you here in terms of setting up this overlap?

The great Italian writer Italo Svevo said that, when we invent a story, the first person who must believe that the story is not pure invention but intimately real is the author. In order to begin such a long novel, I felt the need to anchor it as much as possible to that which I am, that which I know, even to the point of using my own name for one of the characters.

Lila and Elena are born into a very narrow world whose confines they struggle to expand. It’s notable that while as girls they have fewer options, at the same time they seem to have almost more freedom to move than the boys they grow up with. Do you think that’s true, and if so, why?

The female experience during the second half of the century was characterized by the battle to get out from under patriarchy. Enormous numbers of women realized that the limits imposed on them were not natural but merely a function of sexual discrimination, which in turn was a model for every other kind of discrimination. This made their need for liberation acute. So, while men limited themselves to redefining the rules of their games, women stormed the field of play, widening it and enlarging it. Male conservatism gives the impression of greater mobility for women, but the truth is that it is never the jailer who is most restless, but she who is forced to find an escape.

See the article on PW: http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/authors/interviews/article/54949-my-brilliant-friend-pw-talks-with-elena-ferrante.html

The Book World Post-Sandy

We at Europa Editions have discovered the often lost practice of counting one’s blessings. Hurricane Sandy went easy on Europa’s New York office, our space and our staff alike. In the week after the superstorm, we kept our heat, our electricity, and for the most part, our sanity. The publisher is nothing without the bookstore, however, and some of our favorites were missing out on sales, at best, and at the absolute worst, were demolished. 


We encourage our fans from around the world to support our beloved booksellers. Find them on Facebook, follow them on Twitter, Tumblr, and Pinterest. Order from their online bookshops (where possible), give to them via Paypal and IndieGoGo. If you’re feeling overwhelmingly inspired to help out, call the store and order a book over the phone! We know from personal experience, these booksellers are a chatty and entertaining bunch, and are awash with great book recommendations. 

Take a look at this blog post by The Elliott Bay Book Company (Seattle, WA) for links to East Coast bookstores in need of a little post-Sandy boost:
http://elliottbaybooks.wordpress.com/2012/11/04/sundays-in-bookstore-tourism/
Thad Ziolkowski with Sam Lipsyte at McNally Jackson on 5/21. 

Thad Ziolkowski with Sam Lipsyte at McNally Jackson on 5/21. 

‘The Angry Buddhist’ To Be Released Tomorrow, Reviewed by New York Times, Los Angeles Times

“Everyone knows that when a certain kind of single American female on a Mexican holiday drinks too much tequila she will get a tattoo. And when she is in a sybaritic seaside town like Puerto Vallarta with a girlfriend, they will get matching ones.” 

And so begins the prologue of our newest novel, The Angry Buddhist by Seth Greenland.  The Los Angeles Times referenced the scene as a jumping-off point for the novel’s core storyline, the “madcap final week of a congressional race.” 

Hopefully, this setting won’t be too unfamiliar in our election year: Character Mary Swain is described by the LA Times as a “revved-up Sarah Palin,” and that’s a comparison we wouldn’t argue with. 

Interwoven with this political plot is the romance between two women - one the wife of a candidate - and squabbles among three brothers, one of whom is “the angry Buddhist” himself.  

The New York Times credits Greenland with an “escapist fable” that is “elaborately structured yet remarkably knot-free.” 

The book, at 395 pages, deserves its prologue. But it’s also “swift-moving,” and gripping, and all parts are essential. We hope that it stays with you as long as it has with us. 

And we hope you are as equally excited about its release! 

Europa Editions in blog form. Interviews, excerpts, words of wisdom.

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