FABULOUS AND FORTY-SOMETHING by Linda Gillard
Dorothy L Sayers Fabulous and dead |
When ill health forced me to give up teaching some years ago, I used my convalescence to catch up on reading. This was 2000 and bookshops were awash with chick-lit. (Jane Austen and vampires hadn’t yet been discovered by the marketing men.) As I was forty-seven, with only a limited interest in shopping, shoes and handbags, I struggled to find commercial fiction that reflected my taste or even my life. Few novels featured women of my age centre stage. Romantic heroines over forty simply didn’t exist. Mature women appeared only as somebody’s mother or somebody’s wife and they never had sex (unless it was for comic effect.)
LINDA GILLARD Fabulous and 50-something |
As a matter of principle I made my heroine forty-seven - my own age. This was commercial suicide in terms of finding a publisher, but I didn’t care, I was just writing to amuse myself. And I did. I had a whale of a time writing an off-beat love story about a sexy, middle-aged textile artist and a fragile younger man who was a teacher and poet. I set their love story on the bleak but beautiful Hebridean island of North Uist, a place I knew well from family holidays.
Encouraged by my online writing group, I found an agent, then a publisher for what was to become my first novel, EMOTIONAL GEOLOGY - long out of print, but now available again on Kindle for a mere 86p.
My first novel. 86p/$1.99 on Kindle |
When EMOTIONAL GEOLOGY was published a serious young journalist from a serious Sunday newspaper asked me why I hadn't made my middle-aged romantic heroine twenty-five, since this would have made it easier for me to find a publisher. I explained that I hadn't been very interested in a 25 year-old's take on life because I was nearly fifty. (Young people don’t seem to realise that 25 year-olds are only fascinating to other 25 year-olds.)
After EMOTIONAL GEOLOGY, I wrote more novels with heroines in their 40s and 50s and, to my surprise, this aspect of the books has appealed to readers of all ages. Many young women have written to me to say how refreshing it was to read about older women for a change, women who presented positive role models.
Female readers have been fobbed off for far too long with fiction about women under thirty. What is this obsession with youth? Most books are bought and read by women over forty. Why do publishers think female readers want stories about much younger women? Think of the success Diana Athill has recently enjoyed with her memoirs and short stories. Readers can't get enough. Why? Because mature women have really lived. Their lives have been full and varied, sometimes exciting, often tragic. Women who’ve been around the block a few times have collected some interesting souvenirs, not to mention a few scars and they have wonderful tales to tell. I like to think I write fiction that reflects this.
Linda Gillard has three indie e-books on Kindle: EMOTIONAL GEOLOGY, HOUSE OF SILENCE and UNTYING THE KNOT. She will be publishing a fourth, A LIFETIME BURNING in January 2012.
EMOTIONAL GEOLOGY has just been selected for the reading list of the bloggers' Mental Illness Advocacy Reading Challenge 2012
You can find Linda's website here and her Facebook author page here.
Diana Athill - Fabulous and 93 |
Currently on offer - 99p/$0.99 |
Standing at a bus stop one day, I was chatting to a minister’s wife. She said to me wearily, “I’m over fifty. I need to slow down.” I smiled sympathetically, but what actually went through my mind was, “I’m over fifty. I need to speed up.”
Time waits for no (wo)man. I still have a lot of living to do. And so do my heroines.
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EMOTIONAL GEOLOGY has just been selected for the reading list of the bloggers' Mental Illness Advocacy Reading Challenge 2012
You can find Linda's website here and her Facebook author page here.
Comments
Linda, I too am cheering you - and having enjoyed two of your books enormously (A Lifetime Burning and House of Silence) - I'm now off to download Emotional Geology.
Catherine, I for one would love to read The Physic Garden. It sounds just my sort of book. But what do I know? I'm 60 next year, so clearly on the scrapheap. I'll be celebrating my sad decline with my son who's taking me to see Bruce Springsteen live at Sunderland.
I like to read about all ages, and I'm right with you, Linda. I love your books - intelligent, witty, just great reads.
When I sent 'Low Tide, Lunan Bay' to an appraisal service I was told that my 46 year old heroine should be at least 10 years younger. Reluctantly, I complied. Although the book found a publisher, I still regret my decision. In fact I'm not sure I succeeded anyway because one reviewer said she sounded more like 46 than 36!
'Emotional Geology' sounds wonderful and I'm going to read it soon.
The years in the publishing wilderness really got me down (especially the 2 editors who said they probably wanted to publish me and then took 6 months each to decide no, actually, they didn't.) I just wanted to give up writing and put it all behind me.
But I couldn't. I found I had to keep writing and so I came to accept that writing is its own reward. What really mattered was that I should keep making up my stories, keep playing with my imaginary friends.
(I sometimes wonder if you have to let go of something, really let go, for it to land in your lap.)