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FLORENZER by Phil Melanson

FLORENZER

by Phil Melanson

Pub Date: June 10th, 2025
ISBN: 9781324095033
Publisher: Liveright/Norton

A young, gay Leonardo da Vinci navigates Renaissance Florence and its troubled leadership.

Melanson’s assured debut is set between 1471 and 1483, crucial years for both the artist and his homeland. Leonardo had completed his apprenticeship as a painter, but his efforts to find wealthy patrons are waylaid by his lack of interest in delivering conventional work, along with his romance with Iac, a prostitute and aspiring goldsmith who serves as his muse. Meanwhile, Lorenzo, the head of the powerful banking Medici family, is at loggerheads with new leadership in the Vatican, which threatens his ability to assign plum church spots for family members and maintain the family role as the Pope’s bankers. Generally alternating between Leonardo and Lorenzo, the book’s chapters limn each man’s subtle influence on the other; crackdowns on homosexual activity to appease the Pope make Leonardo a target, and Leonardo’s growing reputation as a brilliant painter brings him into the circle of well-off patrons (including Lorenzo’s brother). The historical squabbles between various Italian states during the Quattrocento can get convoluted, but Melanson generally works his way through that by emphasizing Leonardo’s sensuality (sexual and artistic) and the violence that stalks the Medici clan; an assassination attempt against Lorenzo in 1478 is a key element of the plot. Though Lorenzo and Leonardo claim roughly equal space, the novel is strongest as a portrait of Leonardo, who must navigate sexual repression (Florenzer was a Habsburg term for homosexual), his father’s disapproval, and a mind busily developing inventions when not delivering brilliant works like the Madonna of the Carnation. He’s a delectable counterpoint to Lorenzo’s machinations in Florence, where “coin is the one thing this city pays allegiance to.”

Well-researched, proudly lusty historical fiction.