Gina Frangello's previous book, the memoir, Blow Your House Down: A Story of Family, Feminism, and Treason was selected as a New York Times Editor's Choice, received starred reviews in Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and BookPage, and was included on numerous ""Best of 2021"" lists including at Lithub, BookPage and The Chicago Review of Books. Gina is also the author of four books of fiction, including A Life in Men and Every Kind of Wanting. She lives with her family in Chicago.
""The author's conversational tone and frequent references to episodes in her own life--illuminated by her reading of Lenu and Lila's odyssey--create an approachable, informed literary""--Kirkus ""Frangello brilliantly finds the personal and the political in her intimate, exciting exploration of Elena Ferrante's Neapolitan Novels, focusing in on female friendship, culture, desire and longing--and the polarizing question of who and what gender Ferrante really was and who really did the authorship. But more than that, Frangello gets at the bone and heart of why we read, what we expect reading to do for us, and how we interpret a book, a life--be it fictional or real--and our own writing, too. The extraordinary thing about this book is not only did it make me immediately want to reread Ferrante, it made me immediately want to reread Frangello, too. This is required reading for any author or reader, truly.""--Caroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of Pictures of You and Days of Wonder ""Gina Frangello's engagement with the Neapolitan novels deliciously blends personal identification with appreciation and literary criticism. Her discussion of the question of pseudonymity and authorship is mind blowingly smart in how it examines different points of view while never losing sight of the achievement of the novel--whoever wrote it. This book should be shelved beside the quartet in every store and library; it's a great addition to the Ferrante reading experience.""--Alice Elliott Dark Gina Frangello is just so damn smart. In this extended blended essay: a weaving of memoir, gender criticism, book fashion, art philosophy, literary whodunnit and more, her voice brims throughout with a brilliant, grateful, rage. So many layers! So many delights for the lucky reader. 'The author is dead?' Hell no. This one is, as ever, alive and kicking.""--Pam Houston, author, Without Exception: Reclaiming Abortion, Personhood and Freedom