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Martina Maggiore Admits Privacy Breach, Defends Memoir After Cremonini Says It Hurt Him

She says she discovered alleged infidelities by searching his belongings, a mistake she now concedes.

Overview

  • In new interviews on October 30, Maggiore says she looked through Cesare Cremonini’s things to uncover alleged affairs and argues those acts involve others beyond the couple.
  • She says her book focuses on affective dependency and the depression that followed the breakup, calling the relationship toxic only in relation to her own behavior.
  • Cremonini told the Supernova podcast that reading the memoir caused him “a great and deep suffering” and that it disclosed intimate aspects of his life.
  • Maggiore says she did not notify him about the book’s release because they no longer have contact.
  • She rejects the idea she sought publicity, says she has resumed studying psychology, and indicates she has no further revelations about the relationship.