
Priča o izgubljenoj djevojčici
The finale of a powerful saga about female friendship that became the literary hit of the decade. Ferrante's prose is sharp, intimate - like reading a diary of the soul. It reminds us that friendship is war and peace, and the lost girl within us - the key
The novel begins with the disappearance of Lila: her daughter Tina, a little genius girl, disappears in Naples, causing a shock in everyone's lives. Lenù, now a successful writer, mother of three children and a woman at odds with her husband Pietro Airo, faces her own demons - literary ambitions, motherhood and the attraction to Nino Sarratore, an intellectual lover who has always been her weakness.
Lila, after escaping an abusive marriage, works in a computer factory, building a career in the world of male intrigue and the mafia, but she preserves a deep vulnerability. Her life is an improvisation: motherhood, resistance to violence, sexual liberation - she is a "lost girl" who is reborn but loses pieces of herself. Friendship is intertwined through letters, encounters and secrets: Lenù admires Lilia's strength, but suffers from envy; Lila sees in Lenù a mirror of her unfulfilled dreams. "We have always been two in one," Lenù admits, getting to the point – women are built on pain, but also on each other's saving power.
Ferrante paints a chaotic Naples: street violence, student riots, a gender revolution, where women fight for their voices – from kitchen conversations to public demonstrations. The novel explores motherhood as a burden and a gift, loss as a path to wholeness, feminism in its raw reality: "Women have always been lost, but now we are looking for them."
One copy is available





