However obscure that might sound, that effect (to me) seems to have been the intention. Just a moment while we sign you in to your Goodreads account.

Were there to be a book five I might well zipper myself inside a bag outside Feltrinelli the night before release. It was a year before I read the 2nd one, "The Story of a New Name". Lila has left my life and I will never know anything more about her. It is the culmination of the lifetime of two dominate, strong women. In the fair, the child comes across many things he wants to buy. I feel I have lived alongside Lena and Lenu, have experienced their many trials and tribulations, have gazed up at Mt Vesuvius and heard the clatter of the neighbourhood. Though a man tries to calm the child by offering many things, the child wanted only his parents. This writer has a ferocity and a depth that I've rarely encountered.

Her writing keeps digging, like a furious fox terrier the depths and the folds of the relationship between Lena and Lila.

It probably is a little of both.

I don't want to tell the story here but here are some of my observations about reading such a poignant, emotionally honest and complete story:I want to thank Elena Ferrante aka Lenu, for writing such an excellent and complete story of the lives of herself and her soulmate-crazy and brilliant best friend, Lila. If you read closely there are some aphorisms buried here.

It is the culmination of the lifetime of two dominate, strong women. I feel I have lived alongside Lena and Lenu, have experienced their many trials and tribulations, have gazed up at Mt Vesuvius and heard the clatter of the neighbourhood. The four books are chronological and start when the two girls are about 8 years old and continue into their sixties. Read them, trust me.Brilliant, though I'm feeling a bit bereft now.

But the child understands the worth of his parents in their absence. The child wants to possess all things that he is attracted to.
The interesting thing about this story is that it seems without beginning and without end; it merely operates within two chosen points on a continuum.

This is the fourth and final book in The Neapolitan Novels. Yet I doubted.They said there would be sadness and pain. Were there to be a book five I might well zipper myself inside a bag outside Feltrinelli the night before release.

Here is the dazzling saga of two women, the brilliant, bookish Elena and the fiery, uncontainable Lila.

This message of the story makes the reader understand the worth of parents in the life of a child.During childhood, we long for so many things we see in day-to-day life. Everything else loses its significance and the only thing that matters is his wish to be reunited with h is parents.A child looks at this world with wide eyes. In a way, I think the city of Naples took Tina. These books are intense and emotional and dense, so, for me, it is better to let a few months pass in between one book and the next. He does not press his parents for sweets or garlands etc because he accepts that they will never grant him his wish.

The interesting thing about this storThis was truly an exceptional series of novels.

Either they are not able to afford it or they feel that a particular thing is not good for the child. The Story of the Lost Child covers a lot of ground, progressing from the births of Lila's second child and Elena's third, through affairs, separations and new partners, successes and failures right up to old age. Ferrante is a writer I admire so much, and like I said in my original reviews, one that I know confidently I can, and will, read again and again throughout my life.I’ve never read a series before. All the incidents in the story are about this child. It is the final story of many of the characters that lived in this town and came in and out of Lila and Elena lives.Brilliant, though I'm feeling a bit bereft now.
In this book, the narrator Elena becomes a lot more reflective, and the story is more about her children and their struggles than it is about Elena's and Lila's friendship. But very often, the parents are not able to fulfil the wishes of the child. Upon starting it, I immediately thought of my brilliant friend Karen's So ends the final part of the Neapolitan series in which I have been immersed, one after the other. But is refused by his parents.

Hence, the title is very appropriate.A child goes to a festival along with his parents. But it's also so much more.


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