'A meditation on mortality and the unreliable consolations of art, love and materialism' Patrick Gale
An intriguing look at an industry built on appearances -- The best books to look out for in 2025 * Independent * James Cahill gets better and better. I really loved The Violet Hour, trying, and failing, to ration myself rather than reading in a greedy rush. Its evocation of the wonders of art and the dehumanising horrors of the art industry are spot on, of course, but as a novelist what I really admired was his narrative structure and sly choreography of his principal characters. On one level it functions as a highbrow whodunnit, and grippingly so, but it's much more than that, building into a meditation on mortality and the unreliable consolations of art, love and materialism. I can't wait to see what he does next -- Patrick Gale, author of MOTHER'S BOY The Violet Hour had the same effect on me as Tiepolo Blue did - again I'm overwhelmed by the beauty of James Cahill's writing and storytelling. There is such mastery over language and character here, in this disarmingly immersive tale of the infinite potency - and at times the sense of the vacuous futility - of art and the artist -- Santanu Bhattacharya, author of DEVIANTS As sensuous and glimmering as it is dark and unsettling, The Violet Hour depicts the art world's many troubling facets: glamour, money, jealousy, politics, moral corruption and betrayal. Written in Cahill's rich, melodic prose, it's a reflection on materialism, love, and the purpose of art, but more than anything, it is a pure delight to read. A novel to get sucked into -- Jenny Mustard, author of OKAY DAYS James Cahill has done it again. The Violet Hour is a thrilling story told in seductive, shimmering prose. Beauty, money, power, seduction, betrayal. It's all here in this bewitching and all too often troubling backstage pass to the commercial art world -- Chlo Ashby, author of WET PAINT I greatly enjoyed this compelling and beautifully written novel, set in the rarefied world of high-end art, exploring the complex ambiguity and contradictions of contemporary life and personal relationships. I found the author's eye and ear for the nuanced detail of today's art world ritual unusually acute and often unnervingly familiar -- Michael Craig-Martin Cahill allows us a private view of the art world in all its rancid glamour. The artist Thomas Haller - like Wilde's Dorian Gray - has sold his soul. As painters, gallerists and collectors move between New York and the Venice Biennale, auction houses and apartments hung with Mapplethorpes or Picassos, a reckoning is coming. Pulsing with violence and longing, this is a sumptuous, sinister morality tale -- Clare Pollard, author of DELPHI A hugely enjoyable yarn by an author hitting his literary stride -- Sarah Lucas The international contemporary art market is rich territory for a novelist, and James Cahill mines its excesses and absurdities with precision and panache -- Philip Hook, author of ROGUES' GALLERY A tale told with thunder of an art world smitten with itself and peppered with characters who encapsulate the tremendous accomplishments, delusion and mysteries of art -- Jerry Saltz A brilliant reimagining of T. S. Eliot's world of fragmentation and fleeting social encounters, here filtered through the madness of the modern art market . . . It's a novel of beautifully realised surfaces but also alluring (and sometimes alarming) depths, like a Rothko painting seen in vivid, vital glimpses -- Robert Douglas-Fairhurst A riveting, immersive journey into the unsettling underbelly of the art world -- Editor's Choice * Bookseller * I stayed up way past my bedtime reading The Violet Hour and it's brilliant. I'm really in awe of the prose, which is so elegant . . . and the human drama of it is just pitch perfect. I'm so glad to have read it . . . Hypnotic -- Sen Hewitt, author of ALL DOWN DARKNESS WIDE PRAISE FOR TIEPOLO BLUE 'The best novel I have read for ages . . .
James Cahill has worked in the art world and academia for fifteen years. His debut novel, Tiepolo Blue, was shortlisted for the Authors' Club Best First Novel Award, and his writing has been published in Artforum, the Los Angeles Review of Books, the London Review of Books, the Spectator, the Times Literary Supplement and the Daily Telegraph, among others. James divides his time between London and Los Angeles.