The narrator? bears the first part of the writer’s pseudonym. Elena Greco seems to be telling her own coming-of-age story: from the porter’s dau-ghter in a working class district of Naples to a successful author. Elena’s life is interwoven with that of her brilliant friend, Raffaella Cerullo, or Lina, or Lila, and Lila’s story defies categorisation. She appears in heart-breaking avatars thr-ough the tetralogy: an exceptional student, a Jacqueline Kennedy-like teenage fiancee, an ent----repreneur, a mortadella factory wor----ker, a single mother, a wizened eccentric woman. Helplessly, we watch her expend her bri-lliance in grappling with crime. Her story is about disassociation and a blurring of boundaries but mainly about a throbbing, aching absence. After her future is wrested away by a biz-arre, but bel-ievable, dastardly act, she cuts herself out of family photographs and disappe-ars, a woman warrior who wilfully rides into oblivion.