A poet Elio first meets in a bookstore in B. while on a date with Marzia. Wandering into the store, they learn that a book release party has just finished, so Elio buys two copies of the book, which is called Se l’amore, or If Love. “Is it good?” he asks the poet, not knowing he’s the author. “Pure junk,” Alfredo replies. “I should know. I wrote it.” Alfredo then signs Elio and Marzia’s copies, though he says, “I’m not sure this book is for you, but…” Strangely enough, Elio encounters Alfredo again several weeks later, this time in Rome. Having been invited to a reading by Oliver’s publisher, the two lovers go to a bookstore only to find out that the reading is for Alfredo’s collection of poetry. Alfredo reads a poem called “The San Clemente Syndrome” because Elio tells him it’s his favorite in the book. Later, Oliver and Elio go out for a wild night of drinking and lavish eating with Alfredo and his many friends, and Alfredo tells a long story about the genesis of “The San Clemente Syndrome,” which he frames as a poem about desire and homesickness.