Review by Booklist Review
In her memoir about her young life as an It Girl, Fraser-Cavassoni chronicles her wild childhood in London, dating Mick Jagger while in high school, a short stint in Hollywood cozying up to the rich and famous, two years working for Andy Warhol Enterprises in New York, and her entrée into fashion assisting Karl Lagerfeld at Chanel. Because she was part of a celebrity tabloid culture of playboys and party girls in what she calls Warhol Land, Fraser-Cavassoni tells her story by drawing not only on memories and old diary entries but also on press clippings, some fawning, some snarky. Consequently, her book is full of juicy anecdotes and insider info, such as the fact that Warhol's coterie of young British women employees were known as English muffins. But occasionally her account of fun and frivolity can be tone deaf, such as as when she writes, Money intrigued because, as a family, we really didn't have it, then, just pages later, she describes riding lessons, her mother's Dior gowns, and a country home in the Scottish Highlands.--Taft, Maggie Copyright 2017 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Born into an aristocratic British family in 1963, fashion journalist Fraser-Cavassoni (Sam Spiegel) chronicles her education in rebellion as a member of a star-studded social set during the last decades of the 20th century. A maven of the rich and famous, the younger Fraser-Cavassoni dips into wild parties brimming with cleavage and cocaine as easily as she socializes with willowy rock musicians (at age 17 she had an affair with Mick Jagger). Recording her many flirtations, Fraser-Cavassoni skips between London, Hollywood, New York, and Paris, describing a string of gal Friday experiences with powerful movie and fashion agents that paved her way to working in Warhol Studios. It is a breezy account in which chapter topics dissolve into lengthy detours. Less than a third of the book concentrates on Warhol and entourage, not enough to warrant his name in the subtitle. However, her cocktail, catwalk, and nightclub sketches provide an amusing stories of the consummate "English Muffin" (a term for well-born British women working for Warhol) with physical attributes "spilling out in all the right places." This is a perfect beach read. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
The life and fame of "the American godfather of Pop art" as seen through the doting eyes of a former Factory staffer.Fashion journalist and biographer Fraser-Cavassoni (Monsieur Dior: Once Upon a Time, 2014) was the last "English Muffin" to work for Warhol before he died in 1987. Her history prior to landing that coveted position and the ensuing years are lavishly detailed in a memoir exposing the true glamour of the Warhol-ian world. Her glitzy chronicle begins at her boss's funeral, described as "the Big Apple's equivalent of a royal event." Yet it was also "strangely moving," as the author became increasingly aware of Warhol's notoriety not only as an idolized pop artist, but as a man with a uniquely self-effacing personality. Fraser-Cavassoni's own history is also captivating. As the daughter of British writer Lady Antonia Fraser and the stepdaughter of playwright Harold Pinter, the author retraces her familiarity with Warhol from a "socially aware" youth courting extravagance and mischief to her first social encounters with the artist as someone "posh with cleavage." The author then delves into juicier tidbits of her ill-fated dalliance with Mick Jagger, Warhol's discovery and mentoring of artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, and her arrival in America rubbing elbows with celebrities and eventually landing a two-year tenure at Andy Warhol Enterprises. Once firmly ensconced in the business, the 1980s underground art scene swirled around her, and Fraser-Cavassoni unleashes an intriguing stockpile of anecdotes that will delight Warhol's legion of admirers. Appearing in many of these escapades is Fred Hughes, Warhol's business manager and confidant, a dedicated guide who steered Warhol's artistic productions toward maximum profitability and notoriety. The author's treatment of Hughes' allegiance to the artist and painful physical decline following his death, along with the disposition of Warhol's estate and diary publications, aptly tempers the high-fashion celebrity circus the author knows so well. A pop icon's star-studded legacy decorated with red-carpet prestige. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Review by Kirkus Book Review