Call Me By Your Name meets Elena Ferrante in this debut coming-of-age novel about a young girl who spends summers working at her family’s timeworn Italian agriturismo, the tragedy that rends her life into “before” and “after,” and her romance with an American girl, which has unexpected consequences
To ten-year-old Leo, life is a collection. She spends her mornings tidying the rooms of her Nonna Tina’s timeworn Italian agriturismo, carefully accumulating the curious bits of left-behind detritus from guests—a pearl earring, a lock of hair. Her nights are suffused with gathering the stories that flow from her father’s lips—liquor-spun tales of Odysseus and the Trojans in secret battle. But when an accident rips the gentle membrane of Leo’s childhood, she is left vulnerable to the pains and pleasures of growing up.
Years later, in a sultry summer not unlike the many that came before, the agriturismo is the only thing that remains the same. Nonna Tina has grown older, Leo’s brother Max is intractable and mercurial, and the curiosity Leo so loved to feed as a child has turned into something more confusing. When she meets Dolores, an American girl made brilliant by Leo’s perception of her, she can’t help but gather all the experiences first love promises, while shedding parts of the past she no longer fits into.
Embroidering the atmospheric yearning of Call Me By Your Name with the precise, elevated prose of Elena Ferrante, Sofia Montrone’s jaw-dropping debut revels in the exuberant highs and awkward lows of girlhood and captures the universal experiences of trying to hold on to what is elusive, to deny what cannot be faced, and to say what cannot be said.
Poetically written, emotional & beautiful coming of age story. Leo pulled at my heart, she was just such an easy character to love. The pacing dragged at times but overall a memorable story that absolutely pulled at my heartstrings.
Big thanks to Netgalley & the publisher for allowing me to enjoy this.
a sun-soaked sapphic romance set over the course of two sweltering Italian summers. Leo has spent her childhood summers at her family’s hotel, cleaning rooms after checkouts and collecting treasures left behind by guests. whilst her mother is unwell, spending many days at a time in bed, she looks up to her often distant and confusing father, revelling in his attentions and hanging on his every word as he lavishes her with epic tales of Greek heroes.
fast forward nearly a decade, Leo is still tending to the hotel rooms, whilst her beloved Nonna becomes older and more frail, and the hotel shows its own signs of age. enter: Dolores, an American girl with a shaved head who has come to set Leo alight, in more ways than one.
this book oozes summer and sticky heat and sweat - it moves at a languid, almost sleepy pace, allowing us time and space to fall in love with Leo, Dolores and sun-drenched Italian summers. Montrone perfectly captures the awkward parts of girlhood; growing up and noticing changes happening in every part of you.
thank you, Canongate, for the early copy of this gorgeous debut.
This book was beautifully written (and has such a stunning cover!), and Italian summers with sapphic love and stories were lovely and interesting topics to explore, but I just felt like it was missing something.
A coming of age story filled with emotion—tragedy, romance, and self-growth. Nymph is told in two parts: before and after tragedy strikes Leo’s family. At ten years old, Leo holds the universe within herself and sees it reflected in her father. By nineteen, she has lived through something that changes her irrevocably.
In both timelines, Leo is an extraordinary character—one I loved, empathized with, and deeply related to. What I cherished most was witnessing her growth and her gradual journey toward self-discovery. She endures watching a loved one spiral down a devastating path, experiences loss, confronts the aging of her beloved grandmother, and finds love in a space that is fragile and painfully temporary. Yet despite it all, Leo remains resilient, still carrying that universe within her.
I adored the writing. The summery feeling, the atmosphere, the nostalgia woven through every page. Montrone beautifully captures tender, sensitive emotions with prose that is both simple and poetic. The mother–daughter relationship that runs throughout the book is a poignant portrayal of womanhood, and of the love and vulnerability that come with it.
Another aspect I loved was how this book didn’t feel like a book; it felt like life. Things go wrong suddenly, just as they do in reality. Emotions unfold naturally, growth is uneven, and acceptance is never linear. Nymph was a truly moving and enjoyable read, and I sincerely hope to read more from this author.
Nymph follows an American girl named Leo as she comes of age against the idyllic backdrop of the Italian countryside in the way of Elio Perlman and Elena Greco.
Leo spends her summer breaks helping out at her family’s agriturismo in Italy. For her, summers are measured in World Cups, loaves of bread, poker games, lost earrings, and her father’s Homeric wisdom. These things withstand the test of time and tether her to existence apart from her home in New York City. But while days lengthen in the summer season, the passage of time refuses to slow. Over the course of two pivotal summers, eight years apart, Leo bears witness to the complex intricacies of familial and romantic love and the ways it can be both given and taken away.
Reading this book stirred a nostalgic ache in my chest. Sophia Montrone takes a reverent, timeless, and naturalistic approach to memorializing adolescence in the 2010s. She presents readers with a ‘modern’ family, thoughtfully woven together and layered with detail like a tapestry. Such a stunning debut novel!
Thank you to Avid Reader Press / Simon & Schuster and NetGalley for the arc in exchange for my honest review :)
Nymph is a coming of age novel centered on our main character Leo. We follow Leo through key parts of her life, learn her routines, understand her relationships, and watch her grow from a child to a young adult. In true litfic fashion, the meat of this story is in Leo’s relationships and how those experiences define her. I was most intrigued by her relationships with her family. I felt that the themes of grief were narrated equally beautifully and darkly.
While I was originally drawn to this story for the sapphic romance, I found myself underwhelmed by Leo’s relationship with Dolores. I wished I felt their connection stronger, and expected more from their intimacy.
I liked Leo’s quirks, and I grew to enjoy the references of Achilles throughout / as parallels to the relationships in Leo’s life.
All in all, this is a beautiful debut I would recommend for anyone interested in a literary fiction coming of age novel with deep themes of grief, aging and identity.
TW: substance use, mental health, etc.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for my first eArc!
4.5 stars! A lush, beautifully written novel about an Italian-American girl's coming-of-age in the rustic countryside of Italy, which I read in less than 24 hours. This has beautiful prose and imagery, but it is NOT fast-paced and doesn't have a lot of plot. Perfect if you want to luxuriate in beautiful prose, but maybe hold off if you're looking for a ton of plot.
The reason I did not give a full 5 stars: I ended up liking the resolution of the relationship between Leo and her brother Max. But for most of the novel, Max doesn’t do anything and just lingers in the background; he could be cut from the first 80% of the book without making a difference. Also, there was a significant subplot about Leo’s grandma being mysteriously sick— and then it never really got resolved except in a throwaway line.
This is a very impressive debut, and I look forward to reading more from Montrone in the future!
I was enthralled by this book. The setting was deeply evocative- I loved the Italian immersion; both the good and the bad. The characters had a complexity to them that was nuanced and well rounded. The story was emotionally compelling and I enjoyed the Iliad insertions as a storytelling device. I found this entire book to be unlike anything I have read recently. I have been constantly thinking about it since I finished and I believe it will continue to stick with me. The way Sofia Montrone portrayed the feelings of youth into young adulthood and the way we view or family through different eyes at different stages was apt and well executed. This was overall an excellent novel and had a very clear and unique perspective that I appreciated. Thank you Avid Reader for this ARC! Always topnotch.
(ARC - out 06/09/26 via Avid Reader Press) I understand the comparisons between this and “Call Me by Your Name” because both are queer coming-of-age stories set in the Italian countryside and both rely so much on vibes as opposed to plot. Nymph follows Leo during two separate summers spent at her family’s agriturismo (a working farm), when she’s ten and when she’s eighteen. We see how her family changes and also witness her fall in love with an american woman. The yearning in this is so good and so is the evocative language. The descriptions of people and places and food and weather really put the reader in the novel. What a great book this would be to read by the water on a hot summer’s day.
A delectable coming of age story with an amazing main character who has to deal with working for her family, a tragedy that deeply affects her, and a romance with an American. Leo is fascinating and I resonated with her so much as she experienced great tragedy and greater feelings of love as she finds who she really is. So many emotions in this book were so beautifully captured and put into words. The nostalgia of girlhood oozes from every page. I hope I get to read more from this author! I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
this book is all about the writing and the atmosphere. plotwise, there's not much going on, it's mostly a snapshot of two summers in Leo's life - the first thirty percent of the book follows her at 10 years old; the remaining seventy percent follows her at 19. the writing is gorgeous and the atmosphere is excellent. I can totally understand the comp to call me by your name. 8 haven't read Elena ferrante so can't speak to that comp but if her books read like this then I'm sure to enjoy them
Beautiful coming of age story. Captures so fantastically how it feels to be a teenager with no sense of self, fully believing that every aspect of oneself is stolen or passed on from other people, and how jarring it is for others to point out that this is not the case. The tug of war between Leo's duty to her family and her desire is excruciating, and all the better for its subtlety - most of the melodrama in this book takes place entirely in Leo's head. Oh to ruminate for an entire summer over a beautiful futch
I enjoyed this, it’s a beautifully written and atmospheric coming of age story that follows 10 year old Leo whose parents own an Agriturismo in Northern Italy. We get to know her younger brother, chronically depressed mother, and her charismatic but alcoholic father who tells her stories from the Iliad and Odyssey. The second half jumps ahead 8 years when another girl, Dolores, comes to work with them for the summer.
While it is undeniably well written and immersive, it’s pretty light on plot, focusing more on Leo’s internal world. It did capture the feeling of being 18 and all the anxieties and struggles that come with leaving childhood behind.
This would be a great summer read for literary fans.
Thank you to netgalley and the publisher for the eARC.
an atmospheric coming of age story with a stunning sense of place, a beautiful queer romance, and lyrical writing. nymph is a novel to savor. i already wish i could experience the vibrant italian summers and leo’s complex inner world for the first time again.