American feminist Bell Hooks provoked us to rethink the concept of love, and she is cited as one of the big influences on the author during the writing of EVA. Nara Vidal’s second novel challenges the reader to dive deep into the mind of a protagonist-narrator to witness her toxic and misleading idea of love and being loved. Formed by a mother-and-daughter relationship built on the patriarchal foundations of body shaming and control, Eva grows up carrying the burden of guilt for her wish to experience lust and freedom. However, as a curse, her life, like the ones of women before her, shapes up according to the demands of manipulative and possessive relationships, both with her mother and the men in her life. Accused of being possessed by the devil, Eva will only identify love and feel satisfied with relationships that are abusive and violent. As her mother dies, she is free for the first time, and rather than becoming independent from her mother’s heavy influence and control, she loses herself, slowly walking towards a mental battle that will culminate in a deep psychological and dramatic narrative about women’s oppression, the patriarchy, and the pattern of toxic love.