THE NEAPOLITAN NOVELS by Elena Ferrante | Book(s) Review

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  • Опубликовано: 8 июн 2022
  • A book review of the Neapolitan Novels by Elena Ferrante, trans. Ann Goldstein (Europa Editions 2012-2015).
    The Neapolitan novels consists of four novels:
    My Brilliant Friend (2012): amzn.to/395c94r
    The Story of a New Name (2013): amzn.to/3NY22gk
    Those Who Leave and Those Who Stay (2014): amzn.to/3toMLxr
    The Story of the Lost Child (2015): amzn.to/3QaZzkH
    ko-fi.com/travelthroughstories
    / travelstoriesyt
    #elenaferrante #anngoldstein #theneapolitannovels #mybrilliantfriend #bookreview

Комментарии • 49

  • @Elizabeth-Reads
    @Elizabeth-Reads 2 года назад +33

    This is probably the best review of the series I’ve seen; the recent discussions I’ve seen from others tend to focus on the relationship without digging much deeper and seeing the broader tapestry. These were some of my favorites of the last decade. Thanks for your review, Sean, I’m tempted to go back and reread!

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  2 года назад +1

      Thank you so much! The really are incredible books - definitely one of the best series of the decade.

  • @gossipgirl9425
    @gossipgirl9425 Год назад +3

    It’s an excellent story and its magnificent review. Thanks to your analysis I’m obsessed with this novel more then I’ve ever could imagine. In my native language I couldn’t find speakers who could tell this history so narrowly and beautifully. I’ll add your channel in my favourite list.

  • @josh440
    @josh440 2 года назад +9

    I'm only halfway through the novels but man your reviews are always fantastic. Always appreciate your strong emphasis on in-depth thematic analysis. Thanks as always!

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  2 года назад +1

      Thanks, Josh! I hope you're enjoying your ride - it keeps getting better and better!

  • @utkarshpanwar8067
    @utkarshpanwar8067 11 месяцев назад +1

    This is a very comprehensive review. Just like the novels, you were able to explain so much with simplicity. Congratulations on achieving this feat!

  • @alesianakipava7781
    @alesianakipava7781 4 месяца назад

    That’s a brilliant review 🥰 thank you so much ❤

  • @vanderteufel
    @vanderteufel 2 года назад +39

    You read all four novels internally mispronouncing Lila as Lilia. Lee-la!

    • @miame8711
      @miame8711 Год назад +8

      This ruined an otherwise very nice video for me, sorryyy

  • @jeff8835
    @jeff8835 Год назад +1

    Appreciate this video so much, after overspending on books so long, i am over the moon to conclude the spending binge with this author, could not help but get everything available, even the "children's book". She's somewhat of an Italian Clarice Lispector huh??!!

  • @Paromita_M
    @Paromita_M 2 года назад +1

    This is a really great review. I am really keen to read these books now.
    I am intrigued by reclusive authors e.g. Donna Tartt - it means we only 'know' them through their works and that feels so unique in the current age?

  • @erinh7450
    @erinh7450 2 года назад +3

    I've flirted with reading these for a while, have to say your review is moving them back up the list!

  • @SpringboardThought
    @SpringboardThought 2 года назад +1

    Great review! Totally agree. The third book was so good. Can’t wait to get to the finale soon. Maybe next month. Been rationing them because I don’t want them to be over. It was wild too, because I rated the first one 5 stars and then kept reading and was like mmm 6 stars? 7 stars? Idk. I thought the dialogue between the first and second especially was phenomenal. Even as a duology they are perfect, to me.

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  2 года назад +1

      Thanks! Agreed - I found the first book to be very good, but they somehow managed to get better. Interested to hear what you make of the final book!

  • @clarissadalloway9236
    @clarissadalloway9236 2 года назад +1

    I really liked your review, congrats! I read vol 1-3 of the series and stopped because it seemed to me every volume was less convincing than the previous one. But I'll give it a try and read vol 4 thanks to your review, Sean. I enjoyed so much her previous romances, such as The days of abandonment.

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  2 года назад

      Thank you, Clarissa! Interesting that you found the later volumes less and less convincing as I had the opposite experience. I really want to read her other books now - I'll seek out The Days of Abandonment! Thanks for the recommendation.

    • @tiredcat9492
      @tiredcat9492 Месяц назад

      @@travelthroughstories Personally I have found all her other books disappointing, though I could not admire the Neapolitan Quartet more. It seems to me the other books traverse much of the same territory, but never in the perfect, compelling way of My Brilliant Friend .

  • @bookmark_kl
    @bookmark_kl 2 года назад

    Great review!

  • @kiranreader
    @kiranreader 2 года назад

    ahh!! i really need to read these asap!!

  • @yahaira_f
    @yahaira_f 2 года назад

    Whelp! I ordered the quartet because of you!! Will report back ☺️

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  2 года назад

      Wow, I'm really glad that I've convinced someone to pick them up! I hope you love them as much as I did, Yahaira. Looking forward to hearing what you make of them.

  • @impywimpy
    @impywimpy 2 года назад +1

    Having initially refused to read this series because of bad cover art, it was actually the tv-series that won me over. I think the number of literary adaptations in series form that really works are limited, but right from the start, I found My Brilliant Friend to have some of the same qualities that makes Brideshead Revisited a classic. I think you touch on something profound when you talk of friendship as a mirror, because in literature, I really am struggling to think of accomplished books that center around two characters and their relationship without it becoming a more strict kind of romance, a meta-exploration or a philosophical treatise on the «duality of man». Not saying this series doesn't deal with those things, but it's also happening in the background, and I don't think I've ever felt so comfortable discussing characters directly - their motivations and choices - as in the Neapolitan novels. Usually, every kind of spoiler warning is a symbol of a literary disease to me, but here, I get the same feeling that Tolstoy apparently got writing about love (paraphrased): «My plan was for them to end up together, but the story refused to cooperate».
    The cover screamed meta-exploration of the modern romance feuilleton to me. I am so sick of that that I thought I'd leave this one to the critics, but getting into the story through the tv-series, I was simply mesmerized by the characters, the sense of time and place, and the pacing. The crafting-aspect is so expertly done from a classics-perspective that I was won over by the display of skill in record time.
    I still haven't read the novels, but I very much plan to do so. The major reason I haven't so far is the fact that I would really like to read them out loud to my girlfriend in norwegian (as we've watched the show together), but the novels are only available in nynorsk.
    This is beyond what you usually get from RUclips-criticism quality wise, but did you have problems with the editing this time? There are a few details that stuck out to me. I also think you should either get a better set-up if you want to read directly into the camera or just fill the entire screen with text. The way you did it here with the split screen was confusing, and together with the editing making your reading not always corresponding with the words shown on the pages, and you some times seeming a bit stressed on camera (which to me in this context is endearing), I think it hurt communication a tiny bit.
    Thank you for doing this! Consider youself supported. :)

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  2 года назад +2

      Thanks for your thoughts! I also was introduced to this series through the TV show. I watched the first season a few years ago and really enjoyed it - I haven't yet finished the show though.
      And thanks for criticisms. I only noticed one editing mistake concerning the text on screen and that was simply that it disappeared too early. I couldn't be bothered to re-render the video though as it takes hours and hours for my laptop to do so. As for looking stressed on camera, I can't do much about that. That's what I look like (though I was, to be fair, particularly sleep deprived for this recording but needed to record it anyways before the weekend). Thanks for the support!

    • @danielionh3386
      @danielionh3386 2 года назад

      www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2016/07/elena-ferrante-covers-bad-no-good/488732/

  • @_x_asc6
    @_x_asc6 Год назад

    May i ask about the exact spelling of the name of the author mentioned in the beginning of the idea, and the series you referred to?

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  Год назад

      I believe I was comparing Ferrante's Neapolitan novels with Karl Ove Knausgaard's My Struggle series (Karl Ove Knausgård's Min Kamp in Norwegian). I should have put this in the description, sorry!

  • @whatpageareyouon
    @whatpageareyouon 2 года назад +2

    Terrific review! 🕊Spreading the gospel 🙏 haha

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  2 года назад

      Yesss! I was thinking of you while reading them because I know how much you love them. Thank you!

  • @itsmiri9
    @itsmiri9 5 месяцев назад

    your thoughts on tina’s disappearance?

  • @kssomms
    @kssomms 2 года назад

    Excellent review (as well as the others I've watched). I see Albinati's The Catholic School behind you, which is an excellent companion to the Neapolitan novels. I'm surprised it's not well known, since I'd say it's on the same level as these books or Knausgaard's. Based on some of the (dumbfoundingly bad) bad reviews on amazon and goodreads, it seems to have fallen into the wrong type of reader's hands, although there are some good ones that do it justice. It's an intense dissection of masculinity and misogyny, among other things. Like Ferrante or Knausgaard with the themes of institutional and cultural evil and horror from 2666. All this to say I hope you end up reviewing it.

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  2 года назад

      Yes! I'm about 350 pages into it right now. It seemed like the perfect sequel or companion piece to Ferrante. It's really wonderful. I hope to do a review of it if I can narrow down my thoughts on it a bit - I think I already have enough notes on it to do a full video or two...

  • @KDbooks
    @KDbooks 2 года назад +8

    You’ve sold me, but those covers… they…. Why?

    • @lowshelfesteem
      @lowshelfesteem 2 года назад +4

      you better read this series i swear to god

    • @kssomms
      @kssomms 2 года назад

      Haha, I have a feeling they wouldn't have sold as well if the covers reflected the contents of the books. But you'll come to appreciate the covers as jokes once you read them. I agree they are must-reads.

    • @travelthroughstories
      @travelthroughstories  2 года назад +1

      I can't help you with that one... haha. The spines are nice though! I'd be interested to hear what you make of them, especially as you've read Knausgård.

    • @SakuraNight
      @SakuraNight Год назад

      Very late, but I found it funny that in one of the books there is a comment about some books that are translated into other languages with horrible (I don't remember the exact term) photos of people in black and white. In Spanish there is a version with that type of covers that says almost nothing about the story too.

    • @NECountry
      @NECountry 9 месяцев назад

      The cover photos aren't great, but the physical construction of these books, including the material used for the covers, is extremely nice, better than the vast majority of paperbacks.

  • @amyoprean7944
    @amyoprean7944 Год назад

    They go to retrieve the dolls right away, not weeks later.

    • @amyoprean7944
      @amyoprean7944 Год назад

      They go into the basement right away, I mean. They go up the stairs a while later.

  • @laurasalo6160
    @laurasalo6160 2 года назад +1

    I am so sick of "feminist" books/topics. Just write a good book, please!!
    Maybe noone can find her cuz a man wrote it... 😆
    I will take your word that this one is a worthy read.

    • @MartinThau
      @MartinThau Год назад +1

      The author most likely is a couple - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domenico_Starnone

    • @francescofilippi2824
      @francescofilippi2824 Год назад +1

      I suppose you don't know Elsa Morante, Natalia Ginzburg, Simone De Beauvoire or Virginia Woolf