You're looking for a guide on "La Furia" by Alex Michaelides!
Set on a private Greek island, The Fury follows – a former movie star turned recluse – and a small group of her closest (and not-so-closest) friends and family. When a violent storm traps them on the island, old grudges, secrets, and betrayals surface. The narrator is Elliot Chase , a charming but unreliable playwright who insists he’s telling us “the real story” – but as with any Michaelides novel, reality is slippery.
The brilliance of The Fury lies in its structure. It’s told in "Acts," mimicking a Greek tragedy. Every time you think you’ve pinned down the motive—whether it’s —Elliot pauses to tell you that you’ve been looking at the wrong corner of the room. The Verdict
Just as The Silent Patient had a shock ending that redefined everything you read before, The Fury plays with perspective. Elliot, the narrator, admits early on that he is unreliable. He tells us a story, then stops, rewinds, and says, "That’s not quite right. Let me start over." This meta-fictional approach keeps the reader constantly off-balance.
Starting with the author, Alex Michaelides studied screenwriting and wrote the successful "Silent Patient". He's known for psychological thrillers with unreliable narrators. The sequel is likely to continue exploring Theo's trauma and perhaps his struggle with the truth.