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My Life: Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog

My Life: Portrait of the Artist as a Young Dog is an anthropomorphic literary fable with the shape of an artist’s coming-of-age story. It follows Piccolo Fortunato, an Italian greyhound from Venice, as he leaves home to search for his missing father and make his name as a sculptor in America. What begins as a charming adventure becomes a sharper story about art, ambition, exploitation, family, and freedom.

I liked how strange and sincere the book is willing to be. A dog artist from Venice could easily become a cute gimmick, but the voice has enough conviction to carry the idea. Piccolo sees the world through smell, movement, hunger, memory, and craft, and that makes the writing feel physical. Venice has damp rooms, markets, old paintings, and family grief. Brooklyn has hot dogs, steel, money, locked windows, and hard lessons. The contrast gives the book sweetness and bite.

The author’s best choice is letting the book stay slightly odd rather than smoothing it into something more ordinary. The art-world satire is blunt at times, especially in the scenes with Guy Gizárd, but it works because Piccolo’s innocence keeps exposing how ugly ambition can look when it is dressed up as mentorship. I also appreciated the way the novel keeps returning to craft. Making art here is memory, instinct, resistance, and sometimes survival. The book’s voice is formal in places, and the premise may not work for readers who want realism from the first page. You have to accept the fable on its own terms, and you’ll enjoy it more if you do.

I would recommend My Life to readers who enjoy animal narrators, literary fables, art-centered fiction, and stories that mix humor with moral seriousness. It will especially appeal to people who like books about artists, outsiders, immigrants, and the cost of keeping your own voice in a world that keeps trying to brand it. It is unusual. But I think that is the point.

Pages: 184 | ASIN: B0CX6GL4GZ

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