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Remembering Jilly Cooper: A Tribute from Her Readers

Following the sad passing of Jilly Cooper earlier this week, several of our readers have written in to express their sadness and respect for one of our most revered authors. Here’s some of their views.

Jo, Leicester

Jilly Cooper was the author who made mischief not just respectable, but marketable. For those of us writing from the provinces (or what we affectionately call “the creative heartlands”) she proved that great literature doesn’t have to live in Bloomsbury to matter.  Her unforgettable characters (as vain, hopeful and gloriously human as the rest of us) remind us that laughter is the truest national therapy. In many ways, Jilly paved the way for today’s new wave of regional voices, the very voices Nick Owen Publishing is proud to champion. Her laughter lives on, not only in her books but in every author who dares to write with spirit (such as me).

Mike, Doncaster

There was always a copy of Riders somewhere in our house; sometimes on the coffee table, sometimes in the bath, sometimes on a sun-lounger during family holidays. Jilly Cooper gave readers of every demographic permission to be glorious, ambitious, and kind all at once. She helped women feel seen, even when they were, shall we say, between beauty appointments. Her characters felt like friends: glamorous yet relatable, witty yet warm: the perfect companions for readers navigating real-world romance and responsibility. Jilly’s readership, like ours, spans class and culture from the salons of Surrey to the semis of Speke.

David, Oxford

In her own subversively effervescent manner, Jilly Cooper became an unintentional sociologist of late-twentieth-century Britain:  the Austen of aspiration, the anthropologist of charm if you will. Beneath the effervescence, she mapped the moral cartography of ambition and embarrassment with surgical accuracy. Her prose, deceptively effulgent, achieved what few writers dare: a fusion of populism and precision. As someone who once wrote an MA thesis on postmodern irony, I find her linguistic elasticity thrilling with her ability to oscillate between farce and truth, between satire and sympathy. To laugh with Jilly was to recognise one’s own absurdity and to forgive it.

Rez, London

I’ll admit it: I picked up Rivals because my wife left it in the car. I meant to take the piss, but then I couldn’t stop reading. There was something familiar about it all: the Shed rivalries, the camaraderie, the small-town loyalties. Swap polo for darts and you’ve got half the wonderful community who make up our loyal northern readership. Jilly wrote people like they were already alive , proof that storytelling travels faster than gossip (and yes, we ship free over £10). She made joy look like hard work and that’s the kind of art I respect

Liz, Brighton

The air on the Sussex coast felt momentarily less mischievous though that may have been the sea fog. Jilly Cooper’s sparkle lingers in the laughter that escapes when you shouldn’t, in the pages that shimmer with courage disguised as comedy. Her books remain a reminder that warmth, wit, and good storytelling never go out of fashion, much like the enduring glow of Nick Owen Publishing’s backlist titles. Jilly taught us that joy is its own legacy, one that lives on, from Seaford to the shelves of every reader with heart.

Compiled with professional affection by Julian Pilkington-Sterne

Marketing Executive | Nick Owen Publishing

“Consistency is the new creativity.”

We’ll be reflecting on the work of Jilly Cooper through the following week so if you’d like to contribute to the debate, please just drop us a line or two!

Listen in to the Ageing Swimmer’s Confessions! Now on Notts TV…

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