Read The Story of a New Name (The Neapolitan Novels) Online
Authors: Elena Ferrante
Europa Editions
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This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously.
Copyright © 2012 by Edizioni E/O
First publication 2013 by Europa Editions
Translation by Ann Goldstein
Original Title:
Storia del nuovo cognome
Translation copyright © 2013 by Europa Editions
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
Cover Art by Emanuele Ragnisco
www.mekkanografici.com
ISBN 9781609451479
Elena Ferrante
STORY OF A NEW NAME
BOOK TWO OF THE NEAPOLITAN NOVELS
Translated from the Italian
by Ann Goldstein
The Cerullo family (the shoemaker’s family):
Fernando Cerullo,
shoemaker, Lila’s father.
Nunzia Cerullo,
Lila’s mother. She is close to her daughter, but doesn’t have the authority to support her against her father.
Raffaella Cerullo,
called Lina, or Lila. She was born in August, 1944, and is sixty-six when she disappears from Naples without leaving a trace. A brilliant student, at the age of ten she writes a story titled
The Blue Fairy
. She leaves school after getting her elementary-school diploma and learns to be a shoemaker.
Rino Cerullo,
Lila’s older brother, also a shoemaker. With his father, Fernando, and thanks to Lila and to Stefano Carracci’s money, he sets up the Cerullo shoe factory. He becomes engaged to Stefano’s sister, Pinuccia Carracci. Lila’s first son bears his name, Rino.
Other children.
The Greco family (the porter’s family):
Elena Greco,
called Lenuccia or Lenù. Born in August, 1944, she is the author of the long story we are reading. Elena begins to write it when she learns that her childhood friend Lina Cerullo, called Lila only by her, has disappeared. After elementary school, Elena continues to study, with increasing success. Since childhood she has been secretly in love with Nino Sarratore.
Peppe, Gianni,
and
Elisa
, Elena’s younger siblings
.
The
father
is a porter at the city hall.
The
mother
is a housewife. Her limping gait haunts Elena.
The Carracci family (Don Achille’s family):
Don Achille Carracci,
the ogre of fairy tales, dealer in the black market, loan shark. He was murdered.
Maria Carracci,
wife of Don Achille, mother of Stefano, Pinuccia, and Alfonso. She works in the family grocery store.
Stefano Carracci,
son of the deceased Don Achille, husband of Lila. He manages the property accumulated by his father and is the proprietor, along with his sister Pinuccia, Alfonso, and his mother, Maria, of a profitable grocery store.
Pinuccia,
the daughter of Don Achille. She works in the grocery store. She is engaged to Rino, Lila’s brother.
Alfonso
, son of Don Achille. He is the schoolmate of Elena. He is the boyfriend of Marisa Sarratore.
The Peluso family (the carpenter’s family):
Alfredo Peluso
, carpenter. Communist. Accused of killing Don Achille, he has been convicted and is in prison.
Giuseppina Peluso
, wife of Alfredo. A former worker in the tobacco factory, she is devoted to her children and her imprisoned husband.
Pasquale Peluso
, older son of Alfredo and Giuseppina, construction worker, militant Communist. He was the first to become aware of Lila’s beauty and to declare his love for her. He detests the Solaras. He is engaged to Ada Cappuccio.
Carmela Peluso
, also called
Carmen
, sister of Pasquale. She is a sales clerk in a notions store. She is engaged to Enzo Scanno.
Other children
.
The Cappuccio family (the mad widow’s family):
Melina
, a relative of Nunzia Cerullo, a widow. She washes the stairs of the apartment buildings in the old neighborhood. She was the lover of Donato Sarratore, Nino’s father. The Sarratores left the neighborhood precisely because of that relationship, and Melina has nearly lost her reason.
Melina’s
husband
, who unloaded crates in the fruit and vegetable market, and died in mysterious circumstances.
Ada Cappuccio
, Melina’s daughter. As a girl she helped her mother wash the stairs. Thanks to Lila, she will be hired as salesclerk in the Carracci’s grocery. She is engaged to Pasquale Peluso.
Antonio Cappuccio
, her brother, a mechanic. He is Elena’s boyfriend and is very jealous of Nino Sarratore.
Other children
.
The Sarratore family (the railway-worker poet’s family):
Donato Sarratore
, conductor, poet, journalist. A great womanizer, he was the lover of Melina Cappuccio. When Elena went on vacation to Ischia, she is compelled to leave in a hurry to escape Donato’s sexual molestations.
Lidia Sarratore
, wife of Donato.
Nino Sarratore
, the oldest of the five children of Donato and Lidia. He hates his father. He is a brilliant student.
Marisa Sarratore
, sister of Nino. She is studying, with mediocre success, to be a secretary.
Pino, Clelia
, and
Ciro Sarratore
, younger children of Donato and Lidia.
The Scanno family (the fruit-and-vegetable seller’s family):
Nicola Scanno
, fruit-and-vegetable seller.
Assunta Scanno
, wife of Nicola.
Enzo Scanno
, son of Nicola and Assunta, also a fruit-and-vegetable seller. Lila has felt a liking for him since childhood. Their friendship begins when Enzo, during a school competition, shows an unsuspected ability in mathematics. Enzo is engaged to Carmen Peluso.
Other children
.
The Solara family (the family of the owner of the Solara bar-pastry shop):
Silvio Solara
, owner of the bar-pastry shop, a Camorrist tied to the illegal trafficking of the neighborhood. He was opposed to the Cerullo shoe factory.
Manuela
Solara
, wife of Silvio, moneylender: her red book is much feared in the neighborhood.
Marcello and Michele Solara
, sons of Silvio and Manuela. Braggarts, arrogant, they are nevertheless loved by the neighborhood girls, except Lila, of course. Marcello is in love with Lila but she rejects him. Michele, a little younger than Marcello, is colder, more intelligent, more violent. He is engaged to Gigliola, the daughter of the pastry maker.
The Spagnuolo family (the baker’s family):
Signor Spagnuolo
, pastry maker at the Solaras’ bar-pastry shop.
Rosa Spagnuolo
, wife of the pastry maker.
Gigliola Spagnuolo
, daughter of the pastry maker, engaged to Michele Solara.
Other children
.
The Airota family:
Airota
, professor of Greek literature.
Adele
, his wife.
Mariarosa Airota
, the older daughter, professor of art history in Milan.
Pietro Airota
, student.
The teachers:
Maestro Ferraro
, teacher and librarian.
Maestra Oliviero
, teacher. She is the first to notice the potential of Lila and Elena. When Lila writes
The Blue Fairy
, Elena, who likes the story a lot, and gives it to Maestra Oliviero to read. But the teacher, angry because Lila’s parents decided not to send their daughter to middle school, never says anything about the story. In fact, she stops concerning herself with Lila and concentrates only on the success of Elena.
Professor Gerace
, high-school teacher.
Professor Galiani
, high-school teacher. She is a very cultured woman and a Communist. She is immediately charmed by Elena’s intelligence. She lends her books, protects her in the clash with the religion teacher.
Other characters:
Gino
, son of the pharmacist.
Nella Incardo
, the cousin of Maestra Oliviero. She lives in Barano, on Ischia, and Elena stayed with her for a vacation at the beach.
Armando
, medical student, son of Professor Galiani.
Nadia
, student, daughter of Professor Galiani.
Bruno Soccavo
, friend of Nino Sarratore and son of a rich industrialist in San Giovanni a Teduccio, near Naples.
Franco Mari
, student.
I
n the spring of 1966, Lila, in a state of great agitation, entrusted to me a metal box that contained eight notebooks. She said that she could no longer keep them at home, she was afraid her husband might read them. I carried off the box without comment, apart from some ironic allusions to the excessive amount of string she had tied around it. At that time our relationship was terrible, but it seemed that only I considered it that way. The rare times we saw each other, she showed no embarrassment, only affection; a hostile word never slipped out.
When she asked me to swear that I wouldn’t open the box for any reason, I swore. But as soon as I was on the train I untied the string, took out the notebooks, began to read. It wasn’t a diary, although there were detailed accounts of the events of her life, starting with the end of elementary school. Rather, it seemed evidence of a stubborn self-discipline in writing. The pages were full of descriptions: the branch of a tree, the ponds, a stone, a leaf with its white veinings, the pots in the kitchen, the various parts of a coffeemaker, the brazier, the coal and bits of coal, a highly detailed map of the courtyard, the broad avenue of
stradone
, the rusting iron structure beyond the ponds, the gardens and the church, the cut of the vegetation alongside the railway, the new buildings, her parents’ house, the tools her father and her brother used to repair shoes, their gestures when they worked, and above all colors, the colors of every object at different times of the day. But there were not only pages of description. Isolated words appeared, in dialect and in Italian, sometimes circled, without comment. And Latin and Greek translation exercises. And entire passages in English on the neighborhood shops and their wares, on the cart loaded with fruit and vegetables that Enzo Scanno took through the streets every day, leading the mule by the halter. And many observations on the books she read, the films she saw in the church hall. And many of the ideas that she had asserted in the discussions with Pasquale, in the talks she and I used to have. Of course, the progress was sporadic, but whatever Lila captured in writing assumed importance, so that even in the pages written when she was eleven or twelve there was not a single line that sounded childish.
Usually the sentences were extremely precise, the punctuation meticulous, the handwriting elegant, just as Maestra Oliviero had taught us. But at times, as if a drug had flooded her veins, Lila seemed unable to bear the order she had imposed on herself. Everything then became breathless, the sentences took on an overexcited rhythm, the punctuation disappeared. In general it didn’t take long for her to return to a clear, easy pace. But it might also happen that she broke off abruptly and filled the rest of the page with little drawings of twisted trees, humped, smoking mountains, grim faces. I was entranced by both the order and the disorder, and the more I read, the more deceived I felt. How much practice there was behind the letter she had sent me on Ischia years earlier: that was why it was so well written. I put everything back in the box, promising myself not to become inquisitive again.