top of page
libri impilati

Next book

LA CANARIA (The Canary)

Proposed to 2026 Strega Prize by Antonella Cilento with following motivation “La Canaria is a novel about women and about song, set between early-twentieth-century Naples, in the golden atmosphere of the Belle Époque, and the decade of the economic Boom. Two sisters, Ida and Gilda, now elderly in 1965, face the injuries of age and the reckoning of their lives. Ida longed to sing, Gilda to act, but not everything unfolded according to their wishes.
La Canaria interweaves family memories with historical invention, amid unforgettable songs, distinguished sculptors and painters, the magnificent Mele fashions, and sophisticated parlor gossip. Everything begins with a public drama (Gaetano Bresci’s assassination of King Umberto I) and with the local drama of the famous Piedigrotta festival, which, because of the attack, risks being cancelled. And then there is a ghost story: a piccerella whom only the sisters can see, the ghost of a little sister born prematurely, who embodies the gift of singing—she is ‘the canary,’ who will continue to live, despite everything, even in old age, within Ida.”

LA CANARIA (The Canary)
Genre:

Literary & General, Historical

Author:

Mara Fortuna

Publisher:

Les Flaneurs

Language:

Italian

AUTHOR BIO:

Mara Fortuna was born in Naples. A columnist and short-story writer, she has published in various collections and newspapers. Her books include Una ridere ci seppellirà (Les Flâneurs, 2023) and Acqua di mare e sangue in Nemesi d’amore e d’anarchia (Baldini e Castoldi, 2024). In 2021 she published the historical novel Le magnifiche invenzioni (Giunti).

Pages:

292

Publication:

2025

Rights available:

all except sold

More

DESCRIPTION:

Mara Fortuna’s La Canaria was nominated for the 2026 Premio Strega by Antonella Cilento, who described it as:

“A novel about women and song, set between early-twentieth-century Naples—bathed in the golden light of the Belle Époque—and the decade of the Boom. Two sisters, Ida and Gilda, now elderly in 1965, face the ravages of age and the reckoning of their lives. Ida wanted to sing, Gilda to act, but nothing unfolded as they had hoped.La Canaria intertwines family memories and historical events: unforgettable songs, renowned sculptors and painters, and refined parlor gossip. It begins with public drama (Gaetano Bresci’s assassination of King Umberto I) and the local drama of the famous Piedigrotta festival, whose cancellation seems imminent after the attack. And then there is a ghost story—of a ‘piccerella’ only the sisters can see, the prematurely born little sister who embodies the gift of song, the ‘canary’ who survives, despite everything, within Ida even in old age.”

The novel opens in late-1960s Naples. Ida, elderly and in a state of confusion, begins hurling objects out of her window and into the street. From that moment, her sister Gilda must take care of her, despite their longstanding mutual resentment. Their bond—unbearable yet indispensable—forces them into a shared, sleepless night where, lying back-to-back, they revisit the past.

Ida, charismatic and melancholic, possessed a beautiful voice and a rare talent for composition, yet was forbidden from pursuing a career and compelled to sacrifice her artistic ambitions for the sake of family respectability. Gilda, bold and determined, dreamed of becoming an actress, only to see her aspirations fade into disillusionment.

La Canaria explores how artistic creativity is born and how it collides with societal constraints. It confronts the consequences of patriarchal culture—not only in how it suppresses women’s talent but in how it breeds conflict between women themselves. It also examines the damaging role a mother can play when she adheres uncritically to such norms, driven by deep, inherited fears of economic insecurity. The narrative spans half a century: an eruption of Vesuvius, two wars, fascism, the Neapolitan music industry, and the birth of cinema.

REVIEWS:

Initial Italian critical response has emphasized the novel’s elegant, atmospheric prose and its powerful fusion of personal narrative with twentieth-century history, with critic Anna Bertini calling it “a beautiful story, skillfully placed within the sweep of Great History.” "The novel reconstructs an entire era through the story of a family, intertwining intimate lives with the major transformations of the twentieth century—wars, artistic movements, and social change. Fortuna portrays her characters with sensitivity, showing how the search for artistic expression disrupts and reshapes ordinary life. Her prose is refined and evocative, rich in atmosphere yet never indulgent, combining emotional depth with narrative control." Anna Bertini, La Stanza di Virginia

More

MEDIA:

Literary Agency

A founding member of

Logo for Associazione degli Agenti Letterari Italiani

© 2025 by Eulama Literary Agency. All rights reserved

bottom of page