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  • Location: Naples

The Story of the Lost Child

The Story of the Lost Child

Why a Booktrail?

1970s: The fourth in the Neapolitan quartet

  • ISBN: 978-1609452865
  • Translator: Ann Goldstein
  • Genre: Fiction

What you need to know before your trail

Here is the dazzling saga of two women, the brilliant, bookish Elena and the fiery uncontainable Lila. In this book, life’s great discoveries have been made, its vagaries and losses have been suffered. Through it all, the women’s friendship, examined in its every detail over the course of four books, remains the gravitational center of their lives. Both women once fought to escape the neighborhood in which they grew up. Elena married, moved to Florence, started a family, and published several well-received books. But now, she has returned to Naples to be with the man she has always loved. Lila, on the other hand, never succeeded in freeing herself from Naples. She has become a successful entrepreneur, but her success draws her into closer proximity with the nepotism, chauvinism, and criminal violence that infect her neighborhood. Yet somehow this proximity to a world she has always rejected only brings her role as unacknowledged leader of that world into relief.

Travel Guide

Naples

It’s true that Naples comes to life under the keen hand of Elena Ferrante and her quartet of novels. The unnamed “neighbourhood” where the characters grow up is fictional yet seems to very real and vivid.

They do move around the real city of Naples however and it’s this part that you can use as a guide to the raw and gritty side of the city.

Rione Luzzatti,

The area where the girls grow up is based on working class Rione Luzzatti, not usually a part of the city tourist wander into, yet it’s the side to the city that captures the spirit of the Ferrante novels.

The Neapolitan underworld.

Head to the Aragonese city gates of Porta Capuana, just off Via Carbonara, and head into the pulsating heart of O’ Buvero street market. This is the heart of the underworld in the books. Feel the pulse of the city here! The character Ada Cappucino ran a fruit stall – maybe you can spot him here?

Acquafrescaio

If you are after some of the rather potent volcanic liquid that Elena Greco was under when she first laid her lustful eyes on Nino Sarratore , then you can buy some in Corso Garibaldi.

Via Taddeo da Sessa

This is the stradone of the books – the more salubrious side to the city in the novels. Along here you can see the novel come to life before your very eyes as people can be seen looking out of their apartment windows. These apartments are still the Fascist era ones described in the books.

Street food near the station

Signor Spagnuolo – Gigliola’s father – would have baked pagunitello for workmen at the nearby central station. Pagnutiello is a typical Neapolitan street snack made from eggs, ham and cheese, baked in crunchy bread and sold for €1.

Marco’s shop

Ferrante described men in bars who would spend their time “between gambling losses and troublesome drunkness”. Marco’s shop was situated next to the tobacconists on Via Buonocore.

Public gardens

Lila taught Elena her Latin verbs here in gardens like these

“The Tunnel with its three entrances”

Via Gianturco is where Lila and Lenù skip school and leave the neighbourhood to go and see the sea.

Ferrante Pizza

Have lunch at the Pizzeria Carmnella. The pizzaiolo, Vincenzo Esposito, has invented a pizza to celebrate Elena Ferrante

Via Tasso and the Chiaia district

The nicer sides to the city in the novels can be found here

Solaras sold Lila’s shoes in an upmarket boutique in Piazza Dei Martiri

According to  Lenù on the Chiaia residents:

They “seemed to have breathed another air, to have eaten other food, to have dressed on some other planet, to have learned to walk on wisps of air”.

As the Neapolitan novels prove, Naples is a city of vivid contradictions. Enjoy your search for Lila Cerullo, the missing protagonist.

Booktrail Boarding Pass: The Story of the Lost Child

Destination :  Naples  Author/Guide: Elena Ferrante  Departure Time: 1970s

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