Alessandra is not quite fifteen when her prosperous merchant father brings a young painter back with him from Holland to adorn the walls of the new family chapel. She is fascinated by his talents and envious of his abilities and opportunities to paint to the glory of God. Soon her love of art and her lively independence are luring her into closer involvement with all sorts of taboo areas of life. On excursions into the streets of night-time Florence she observes a terrible evil stalking the city and witnesses the rise of the fiery young priest, Savanarola, who has set out to rid the city of vice, richness, even art itself. Alessandra must make crucial decisions about the shape of her adult life, as Florence itself must choose between the old ways of the luxury-loving Medicis and the asceticism of Savanorola. And through it all, there is the painter, whose love will change everything.
The book opens with the death of a nun and the sisters discovering that she had a shocking tattoo. The story then moves back to the late 15th century where Alessandra Cecchi is a young girl from a wealthy family in Florence. She is interested in art and resents the lack of freedom women have. While part of the story is her fascination with painting and her relationship with a painter her parents hired, most of it is her desire for more freedom which she believes she will find in her marriage to an older man, her relationship with her husband which is not as she believed him to be and the historical turmoil surrounding Savonarola and the invasion of Florence by the French.
I'm afraid I found myself more interested in those political aspects than in Alessandra, who didn't really appeal to me as character, or her artistic worries. In fact most of the characters didn't seem to be fully explored. I do understand that art was Alessandra's way to freedom, her revolt against the world who did not let her be who she wanted to be and who did not let women be more than inferior beings. However I'm afraid she failed to hold my interest enough to make me explore all the undercurrents and symbolism of the novel.
But it might be just me, if you like your historical fiction with a feminist perspective and lots of symbolic images this might be for you.
Grade: 3.5/5
But it might be just me, if you like your historical fiction with a feminist perspective and lots of symbolic images this might be for you.
Grade: 3.5/5
It's not just you. I sent this one went flying around page 100 or so. I flat out didn't care about anyone or anything in the story.
ReplyDeleteOh I'm so glad that I have company! :-) Sometimes I think I must be weird or something when everyone else seems to love some books and I just don't...
ReplyDeleteI don't know...I quite liked this one. Probably because I went into with it no expectations at all!
ReplyDeleteI did like the feminist tone of the novel.
Well most people agree with you Nishitak so it may be just us. :-)
ReplyDeleteInteresting thoughts . . . I really liked Tracy Chevalier's Girl with a Pearl Earring, and I've been on the lookout for a good "art book" ever since, but it sounds like you are convinced that this one would not necessarily be what I'm looking for.
ReplyDeleteNo I didn't find them similar in the least, however most people's opinion differed from mine so maybe you should give it a try...
ReplyDelete