
10 Books to Read After Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Novels
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Have you recently finished the series and are now looking for books like Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Novels? Were you left with a Lenù-shaped hole in your life? Would you like to read about other women existing in political spaces, challenging sexism on the left and producing feminist knowledge? You’ve come to the right place!
I finally finished reading the Neapolitan Novels a couple of months ago, after a year or so of avoiding The Story of the Lost Child because I wasn’t quite ready to say goodbye to the characters and conflicts that made me love the series so much. And then I thought how rare this kind of story is, a woman’s political and personal life, told in her own voice and perspective, not shying away from anything that makes her life seem less glamorous or that makes her character appear frivolous. Ferrante’s novels are quite unique, a mixture of unflinching honesty, Italian leftist politics, and the story of a complex friendship.
Nonetheless, there were books I managed to find to follow my conclusion of the series that were just as interesting, complex and honest. Ferrante awakened in me a need to read memoirs and novels about women who fight for what they believe in and also have rich personal lives. This is exactly what this list is about.
Zami: A New Spelling of my Name by Audre Lorde
This was the first book I read after finishing the Ferrante series, and it was just what I needed. In this biomythography, Lorde tells the story of her own life, starting in the 1950s in Harlem, New York, walking the reader through her discovery of her own queerness, communist struggles and causes that influenced her, and her love for books and writing.
While this book doesn’t focus on only one female character like the Neapolitan Novels do, it does follow the story of political unrest in Nigeria in the late 1960s during the Biafran war. Adichie mixes personal and political perspectives and stories while her characters struggle with sudden violence, personal turmoils, and much more.
Nada by Carmen Laforet
I would say this is probably the most similar book to the Neapolitan Novels on this list, in terms of style and narrative. Loosely based on the author’s own life, Nada tells the story of Andrea, an orphaned young woman who leaves her small town to attend university in Barcelona after the Spanish Civil War. Her personal journey blends with the political turmoil of the time, making her realize things she would have never found if she hadn’t left home.
The Days of Abandonment by Elena Ferrante
I’m not completely sure if this is cheating (and you might have already read all of Ferrante’s novels looking for more Neapolitan nostalgia!), but this book might fill the emptiness in your heart very quickly! Ferrante tells the story of a woman’s desperation at being abandoned by her husband and left with two children to care for.