Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to search

Fiction Coming Of Age

Hunting Piero

by (author) Wendy MacIntyre

Publisher
Thistledown Press
Initial publish date
Oct 2017
Category
Coming of Age
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781771871471
    Publish Date
    Oct 2017
    List Price
    $19.95
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781771871488
    Publish Date
    Oct 2017
    List Price
    $7.99

Add it to your shelf

Where to buy it

Description

This novel interweaves Renaissance artist Piero di Cosimo’s fifteenth-century viewpoint with the twenty-first-century reality of two young Canadian students: Agnes Vane, an art history major fascinated by di Cosimo’s multi-layered imagery, and Peter (Pinto) Dervaig, a student of philosophy passionate about preventing cruelty to animals. Both Agnes and Pinto were marginalized in their adolescence because of their unusual appearance. Agnes has slightly simian features. Pinto is a huge man with a multihued skin pigmentation.

 

When Agnes, as a lonely and alienated child, discovers di Cosimo’s empathetic paintings of animals and human-animal hybrids, she feels she is looked upon gently for the first time in her life. That moment influences her decision to become an animal rights activist, a commitment that ultimately brings her both anguish and insight. Her story is echoed by chapters from di Cosimo’s perspective as he pits his solitary vision, of a golden age when animals did indeed speak, against the dictatorial grip in which Savonarola, destroyer of secular art and culture, holds the city of Florence.

 

Hunting Piero is the tale of a passionate moral quest, and equally, a story of redemption and of love tested by tragic missteps and their deadly consequences

About the author

Wendy MacIntyre lives in Ottawa where she works as a freelance writer and editor. She was born in Glasgow, Scotland and has a Ph.D. in English Literature (University of Edinburgh). She has published scholarly essays and short fiction in journals in Canada, the United States, and Britain, including in the University of Windsor Review and the Malahat Review. Her novels are Mairi (Oolichan Books), The Applecross Spell (XYZ Publishing), and Apart (Groundwood Books), a young adult novel co-authored with award-winning Saskatchewan writer R.P. MacIntyre. Apart was named one of the 10 best picks for young adult fiction for 2007 by the Ontario Library Association and a 2008 Starred Selection Best Books for Kids and Teens by the Canadian Children's Book Centre.

Wendy MacIntyre's profile page

Excerpt: Hunting Piero (by (author) Wendy MacIntyre)

(from Chapter 1, p. 14) Of course she had read about human beings’ sacred relation with animals, and this had always struck her as a pleasing idea. But never before had she properly grasped what it meant. Now that she had actually experienced the irrepressible and electrifying nature of this bond, she saw that it must, and would, revolutionize her life. Nothing in her world would be the same again. The very sunlight she walked in and the air she breathed would look and feel different to her.

 

 

 

(from Chapter 2, p. 23) Yes, he thought, it was always in the secular kingdom of animals, birds and insects that he found his sure salvation. No human touch or voice could cure him as these creatures did, or cause him such unselfish joy. This was why he would continue to lament sorely the senseless death of the Medici giraffe. A glimpse of that dear creature’s rare form would be more welcome to him than a vision of God’s angels.

 

 

 

(from Chapter 11, p. 123) But the compulsion to take action was, if anything, surging in her more strongly than ever before. She was obsessed with the pitiable plight of the cats, dogs and rabbits that were even now on their way to the new laboratory where the stark metal operating tables and torturing instruments awaited them. She could smell their terror as they fouled themselves, crammed into wire cages stacked floor-to-ceiling inside the frigid transport trucks.

 

 

 

(from Chapter 13, p. 165) Piero had taken the most assiduous care to insulate himself from the Prior’s influence. As he had grasped on his sole exposure, Savonarola’s oratory had the power to unmake his artist-self and turn him into a shadow-man shuffling through the streets in penitential mood. He would then become one of those who spied corruption everywhere: even in the clear regard of a new-born child, or in the guiltless creatures of the woods and skies and waters.

User Reviews

Hunting Piero

Hunting Piero
by Wendy MacIntyre
Thistledown Press; October 2017

Review by David Mulholland

“The best laid schemes o’ Mice an’ Men / Gang aft a-gley.” This line from Robert Burns’s poem To a Mouse will come to mind when reading Wendy MacIntyre’s Hunting Piero---a novel both gripping and masterful in its artistic achievement.

Agnes Vane, an art history major, is studying the work of Piero di Cosimo, the 15th century Italian painter whose empathy with animals is depicted in his paintings. His conscience-raising art inspires the young woman to join a group of animal rights activists. Born with slightly simian features, from early childhood Agnes has been subjected to cruel teasing and humiliating comments about her appearance. Now, accepted by the like-minded students who make up the commune, including philosophy student Pinto Dervaig, who is struggling with his own identity, she begins a journey of self-discovery.

There’s always the danger of hyperbole when reviewing a work of art that is so impressive, the reviewer feels he or she cannot do it justice. That said, the literary merit in MacIntyre’s writing has so much depth it makes the writing of many authors---some who receive dubious high praise---appear pedestrian.

At least to this reviewer.

Examples: To convey her character’s dismay with her mother’s criticism of Piero’s work, the author writes: “Agnes felt her mind buzzing, a frenzied bee trapped in a glass jar.” A simple, vivid metaphor. In contemplating her decision to decline her parents’ offer of cosmetic surgery, MacIntyre writes: “Agnes tasted something vile in her mouth and wondered if it was the bitterness of lost illusions.” When Agnes finds herself facing a phalanx of police cars, MacIntyre writes: “She was at first disoriented by the flashing red lights on the black roofs, like blood splashing on her retina.” Metaphorical gems like these are abundant throughout the novel.

Agnes’s conflicting emotions about herself, her entanglement with other members of the commune, her unfolding insight into Piero’s art, and our relationships with animals are the threads that bind the story.

Well-meaning attempts by the activists to raise awareness of the unconscionable way we treat animals end in disaster, but without lecturing, MacIntyre skilfully provokes empathy and compassion for creatures whom we regard as existing only to serve our purposes; be it as food, toil or entertainment.

Short chapters depict Piero’s life in Florence in the 1490s during the “reign” of Girolamo Savonarola. The Dominican Friar is a religious fanatic who uses violent means to eradicate all pleasure and amusement. Finally, the Borgia Pope Alexander V1 excommunicates him, which ignites the courage of Florentine’s secular authorities to arrest him on a charge of “heresy.” Drawing upon this historical context, Agnes interprets the works painted by Piero during Savonarola’s reign of terror, speculating as to how the artist dealt with the oppression.

The author’s imagery is stunning. Readers will easily visualize the details and depth of Piero’s paintings; unveiling the intimacy and power of good art.

All the characters, even minor ones, are exceptionally well-drawn; most notably Pinto Dervaig, who goes to India to escape the commune’s tragedies and contemplate his own motives. It is not an exaggeration to say that the clarity of MacIntyre’s scenes in India would be the envy of any travel writer.

Although the engaging narrative has a “page-turner” urgency, this is a story best read at a leisurely pace, savouring the lucidity of scenes long after the book has been closed.

The back cover has a testimonial from author Jack Hodgins. In his book, A Passion for Narrative---A Guide for Writing Fiction, the third chapter is titled One Good Sentence After Another, which Hodgins explains is the answer Irish writer John McGahern gave to students at the University of Victoria when he was asked, “How do you write good fiction?”

In Hunting Piero, Wendy MacIntyre has fulfilled that directive---and then some!

David Mulholland is the author of three novels of dramatized history: McNab (2006), DUEL (2009), and Chaudière Falls (2016). Info at: davidmulholland.ca

Other titles by