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THE APPRENTICE by Pilar Molina Llorente

THE APPRENTICE

by Pilar Molina Llorente & translated by Robin Longshaw & illustrated by Juan Ramón Alonso

Pub Date: Aug. 18th, 1993
ISBN: 0-374-30389-4
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Originally published in Spain in 1989, a story that begins as an instructive look at apprenticeship in Renaissance Florence (no particular century or historical characters) and ends as a melodrama about a mysterious prisoner in a master painter's attic. Narrator Arduino is a prosperous tailor's son who prevails on his reluctant father to apprentice him to Cosimo di Forlç, an accomplished but mean-spirited painter who starves his young helpers and secretly keeps one in chains because the boy's ability outshines his own. Arduino discovers and befriends the talented Donato; and, when Cosimo falls ill midway through a major commission, he reminds him of the prisoner, who emerges to save the day and succeed his dying master. This predictable, old- fashioned tale, hinging on Donato's unlikely incarceration and told without subtlety, is a far cry from Johnny Tremain. Still, it's a slim, fast-paced read—and a rare translation of Spanish fiction. (Fiction. 9-12)