Paperback: 336pp

Published: Lightning Books (November 2023)

ISBN: 9781785633744


The Muse of Hope Falls

Alan Kane Fraser

£9.99

Everyone took a piece of Christie.

Now she needs something back

As the muse and lover of one of the greatest painters of the late 20th century, Christie McGraw was once a major figure in New York. Now penniless, abandoned and sick, she needs to sell the last thing of any value that she still has in her possession.

It’s a lost masterpiece by her late lover, and she needs the help of Gabriel Viejo, the world expert on the artist, to authenticate it and get into the market. If he can help, she’ll make it well worth his while. Gabriel opens negotiations with a shady tycoon in the hope of saving Christie’s life – and of boosting his own fortunes into the bargain. But there are some nasty surprises in store.

Alan Kane Fraser’s devilishly devious debut is a page-turning plunge into the murkier depths of the art world and the age-old relationship between creator and muse.

Extracts

I first met the wild and impenetrable gaze of Christie McGraw when I saw her one evening, half-naked, at a gallery on Cork Street. It was sixteen years ago, and I’d been sent to cover the opening of an Erik von Holunder retrospective at the Redfern.

‘Wow! Who the hell is that I wonder?’ I’d asked rhetorically, while standing in front of 1978’s Bikini-Girl Gunslinger.

‘Judy McGraw,’ Suzy said. ‘But Von Holunder insisted on calling her Christie. Said she looked more like a Christie than a Judy.’

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Extracts

I first met the wild and impenetrable gaze of Christie McGraw when I saw her one evening, half-naked, at a gallery on Cork Street. It was sixteen years ago, and I’d been sent to cover the opening of an Erik von Holunder retrospective at the Redfern.

‘Wow! Who the hell is that I wonder?’ I’d asked rhetorically, while standing in front of 1978’s Bikini-Girl Gunslinger.

‘Judy McGraw,’ Suzy said. ‘But Von Holunder insisted on calling her Christie. Said she looked more like a Christie than a Judy.’

‘I guess I can see that,’ I said. The only Judy I could think of was Judy Garland and Christie certainly didn’t look like her. There was something about Christie’s stare that made demands of you, rather than suggesting that you might make demands of her. It was unnerving but undoubtedly energised the paintings in which she appeared.

‘Anyway, that’s the name that made her famous, so that’s what she got stuck with.’ Suzy turned to look at me. ‘Did you not know that?’

I sensed the first trace of disappointment in her voice. This was a sensation with which I was to become wearyingly familiar over the next thirteen years, and perhaps I should’ve taken it as a warning of what was to come, but that night it was sickeningly new. Suzy’s final-year dissertation was something to do with the representation of women as objects of desire in twentieth-century art. Her tutor had suggested that Erik’s portrayal of Christie represented an interesting counterpoint to the portrayal of Walburga Neuzil in the paintings of Egon Schiele, so she considered herself a bit of an authority. But back then I knew almost nothing about Von Holunder. After that fateful press night though, in a desperate attempt to win back Suzy’s respect, I resolved to become an expert in the life and works of Erik von Holunder, and I like to think I did. Yet as I walked up and knocked on the door of Christie’s residential trailer in a long-forgotten corner of New York fifteen years (and one divorce) later, I still felt like I knew nothing definite about his thrilling and captivating muse.

‘I was expecting a girl,’ she said, eyeing me with suspicion. She was in her late sixties by then, and I had anticipated being welcomed by a white-haired retiree, her face creased with regrets. But to my surprise she retained the statuesque beauty that had first transfixed viewers when she’d stared out defiantly at them from the frame of 1975’s If all the world was like your smile.

‘I get that a lot, but that would be Gabrielle. I’m Gabriel.’ I offered her my hand. ‘Gabe Viejo.’

She declined to shake it.

‘Have you got some ID?’

I still had an NUJ card, courtesy of my reviews for The Art Newspaper, so I offered her that. She took it from me and examined it sceptically at arm’s length while I waited outside.

‘If you need to get your glasses, that’s fine,’ I said in an attempt to be helpful. Big mistake.

‘I will have you know, young man, there’s nothing wrong with my eyes,’ she snapped. ‘I just need longer arms.’

Despite this, she disappeared back inside her trailer, taking my ID with her.

I turned my head and looked around the rest of the trailer park while I waited. It was called, without apparent irony, Hope Falls.

It was just a few days from the end of September and the weather had begun to turn. A dull drizzle fell wearily from a slate-grey sky, low cloud blanketing the whole of Hope Falls in a gloomy shroud. What could still be seen seemed to have been slowly falling apart for years until now it resembled a Cubist parody of a low-income trailer park. The trailers themselves were patched up like wounded soldiers, their awnings concertinaed like the ruffles on an ugly ante bellum ballgown. Any sense that this place might really be ‘the low-cost housing choice for the discerning professional’, as the hoarding at the entrance had, rather optimistically, sought to proclaim, had long since disappeared. Now the name felt like a sick joke. Hope had not just fallen; it had died a slow and lingering death here.

‘Well, I guess you might as well come in,’ Christie said, returning to the doorway and handing me back my card, a pair of half-lune glasses perched on the end of her nose. ‘The neighbours’ll be talking about me already anyway.’ And the way she flicked a wary glance up and down the avenue of trailers gave me the distinct impression that the name of Christie McGraw came up a lot whenever couples in Hope Falls argued.

I took a seat in her living area and a few moments later she placed a pot of lemon tea I hadn’t asked for in front of me. It was accompanied by a china cup which may once have been beautiful, but which was now scarred by glazing which had become tessellated over many years of use.

‘I didn’t run off with the money, if that’s what you’ve come to ask me,’ she said in an acerbic Bette Davis drawl, but to be honest, that much was obvious just from looking around me. The foiling on the particleboard worktops was slowly peeling off; the throw on the sofa couldn’t quite cover the worn fabric on the seat and arms, and the pattern on the linoleum in the kitchen had faded through wear in two spots. The air freshener that had clearly been liberally applied in anticipation of my arrival could not fully mask the musky aroma of long-term water penetration.

She obviously noticed the look on my face. ‘What? You’re surprised to see me living like this?’

Her voice sounded like the movies of my childhood: rich and deep, with the smokiness of a good scotch. She dripped it over you teasingly, and I loved it.

‘Well, it’s just that… Erik was a wealthy man… And you were together for so long…’

She let go a dismissive snort. ‘Yeah, well, every love story becomes a tragedy if you wait long enough. Welcome to mine.’

quotes

‘Expert storytelling, clever plotting and convincing characters make this not only an absorbing and highly entertaining tale, but also a thought-provoking reflection on the truths that art can tell...or hide’

Hilary Taylor

‘A glorious caper – full of humour, engaging characters and infatuation. A thoroughly enjoyable read’

Nicky Downes

‘A brilliantly twisting plot with bags of heart and soul’

Tim Ewins

‘An enthralling rollercoaster ride through the duplicity and greed of the art world, where nothing is quite as it seems. An absolute joy to read’

Mark Leggatt

‘A witty, well written novel exploring the world of painting, modelling and art-as-commodity, with an unexpected criminal caper at its heart. An exuberant debut that is both fun and thoughtful’

Richard Francis

‘Alan Kane Fraser’s beautiful work about life the other side of the easel – its impact, its anonymity, the inevitable betrayal – both compels and disturbs. He has that unusual ability of allowing characters to collide whilst not being a devotee of either’

Jeff Weston

reviews

‘As a debut, it’s flawless. It’s got intrigue, passion and great writing. And the final great reveal stunned me’

A Knight’s Reads

‘The story is really well told and clips along at a really good pace. I really enjoyed my time with these fabulously created characters. Highly recommended!’

Books and Me *****

‘A captivating and very well written debut, with great characters and many twists and turns. The Muse of Hope Falls gives a thought-provoking insight into the relationship between artist and model and the objectification of women in art’

Babbage and Sweetcorn

extras

ABOUT

Alan Kane Fraser

Alan Kane Fraser was born in Handsworth, Birmingham, in the era when that district was famous for its riots. He has been variously a priest, a housing officer and a charity CEO, in which capacity he wrote for a number of publications, including The Guardian. He is also the author of an award-winning play, Random Acts of Malice.

He still lives in Birmingham, with his wife and a woefully inadequate number of bookshelves.

selected works

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