Langbeschreibung
Like the paintings of Jan Vermeer and Edward Hopper, Hugh Hood's short fiction looks hard at what some might call the surface of things. Like the finely wrought realism of those canvases, Hood's super-realist style doesn't just see-it sees into. While his early publications prompted his reputation as an originator of Canadian modernism, Hood's work taken as a whole reveals a philosophy far older: that of the allegorist. Like Dante's pilgrim, Hood's narrator finds spiritual truths in recognizable forms, affirming again and again the imagination's capacity for penetrating insight and the transcendental potential of art. As he wrote in 1971, "I have at all times endeavoured to look steadily at my subjects. I hope my gaze has helped to light them up."