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Blog, Heroines

Ageless Love: Embracing Mature Romance Protagonists in Fiction

I love reading (and writing) about twenty-somethings being romanced by billionaires and royals (see Royal Risk, for example). But I also enjoy reading about women just like me – those of a not-so-golden age, who are looking at thirty down the wrong end of a telescope. Heroines like that are few and far between. I’ve recently been enjoying a collection of Mrs Miniver stories. Assuming Kay Miniver to be roughly the same age as her author, Jan Struther, Kay is a good example of an interesting heroine in her thirties. The film version was a box-office smash in its day (1942). Winston Churchill said it was a huge boost to morale during the darkest days of the Second World War.

Book cover, Royal Risk. Glamorous young coupls agains t a background of sea and a castle. From blog Embracing Mature Romance Protagonists in Fiction by Christina Hollis.
Movie poster for Mrs Miniver in blog Ageless Love: Embracing Mature Romance Protagonists in Fiction by Christina Hollis

I know plenty of romance writers, and we’re all women of sensible years. Whatever eras we write about, whatever tropes we employ, we all have one thing in common. We know what it was like to be young. On the other hand, I’ve read plenty of romantic fiction written by people who assume that a woman’s emotional needs and development cease the second she enters her fourth decade.

They call any woman over thirty “mature” (as though that was a bad thing, which it isn’t) or say she “looks good for her age”.

It isn’t only male writers doing that. Younger writers, of whatever gender or persuasion, seem amazed that women don’t shatter like meringue once they reach middle age.

Why don’t more romance authors write about older protagonists? Blame the advertising industry. The painful fact is that in today’s fast and furious marketplace, it’s youth that sells. Publishers know that including a winsome young woman or a beautiful young couple on a cover shifts books. Fulfilling reader expectation is a major part of the unwritten contract between publisher and book-buyer. If Romance readers choose a novel with dewy young cover stars, they complain if the heroine turns out to be middle-aged. A hero who, in the book, is much older than his strapping twenty-five year old cover version wouldn’t suffer such ageism. That’s unfair, but it’s an investigation for another day.

Embracing the Mature Protagonist

Fancy LLC is a New York advertising agency dedicated to elevating what is important to women. Fancy’s founding partner and co-chief creative officer Katie Keating wrote about the perception of women (quoted by John Oswald here):
‘There are 83 million women over 40 in [the United States]. That’s a full 25% of the population. Put another way, 1 in 4 Americans is a woman over 40. And half of those are women between the ages of 40 and 60. Think about the women over 40 in your life. Are they playing bingo and birdwatching or are they working hard, kicking ass, and living life?’

Anybody who needs convincing that middle age is only the start should listen to the Sophie Tucker song, Life Begins at Forty. Sophie was a big woman in every way. She was a singer, comedian, actress, and radio personality who outworked and out-dazzled Hollywood starlets half her age. Known as The Last of the Red-Hot Mamas, Sophie recorded this, at a time when the entertainment and advertising industries revolved around ditzy young celebrities.

That’s the spirit!

Real women don’t stop at thirty, so why should the protagonists of Romance books? The feverish piston and valve work which is such an enjoyable part of escapist romances might not come easily (so to speak!) to some older heroines, but that makes it easy to relate to them. Variety is the spice of reading matter, as well as life.

Some novels already treat mature protagonists well. The Notebook by Nicholas Sparks, Major Pettigrew’s Last Stand by Helen Simonson, Our Souls at Night by Kent Haruf and The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel by Deborah Moggach, all feature older, diverse characters who find love and new beginnings in unexpected places. These books have succeeded while defying ageist norms.

I started thinking about the topic of embracing the mature protagonist while working on my current novel, Kitten Cupid. While my hero and heroine are both under thirty, Amy Trubshaw, a minor character, has been tugging at my sleeve. She wants her own story. As soon as I can, I’m going to write one for her.

crop woman writing down notes in diary
Photo by Karolina Grabowska on Pexels.com

Amy is a seventy-something wheelchair user with a racy past. As a single parent fifty years ago, she learned to duck and dive to hide her unmarried status. Her ultra-respectable daughter, Brenda, doesn’t know that her own father could have been any one of a number of men. Amy has no intention of growing old gracefully. Marriage wasn’t for her, but she knows her middle-aged daughter yearns for romance. That’s why, in the next short story I write, Amy Trubshaw will secretly turn matchmaker. She’s lived an independent life happily enough, but she can see the benefits of living within a relationship – especially where her daughter is concerned.

The Romance genre is constantly evolving. Why don’t we start a campaign to champion mature protagonists? We can encourage a broader acceptance and inclusion of them in romance literature by showing that’s what we want to read. Word of mouth is a great marketing tool. We can review and recommend stories that reflect the richness and diversity of love and romance at every age. Asking your local library to stock these books would be more proof that there is a market for them.

Do you prefer your heroines to be young and curious, or older and more worldly-wise? Whether you are a writer or a reader, I’d love you to add your comments below!

To Find Out More…

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There’s an extract of my latest book, Royal Passionhere. To buy Royal Passion, click here.

Creative Writing, fiction, Heroines, Romance, Saga

Three Top Tips For Writing Heroines

 Page URL: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AStipula_fountain_pen.jpgFile
By Antonio Litterio
The heroine of a romance or saga is a singular woman. She has to face conflicts and setbacks on the way to fulfilment without being ground down, or coming across as sickeningly perfect. When readers are asked why they love books, escapism always features highly. We all know how good it can be to get really wrapped up in a story. If your readers like your heroine, they’ll turn page after page to find out what happens to her. To make your heroine as irresistible to your readers as she is to your hero, keep these three points in mind…
LIKE HER: Half the fun of reading romance is in imagining yourself in the heroine’s shoes. Whether those are the clumpy brogues of a downtrodden Cinderella or the Manolo Blahniks of a top PA, we’ll love the woman who’s wearing them if we can recognise something of us within her. Put your heart into your heroine. Give her dreams that we can share – does she want to keep her family together and happy, despite disaster? Or does her cool sophistication hide her fear of rejection? Make her real, make her three-dimensional, and your readers will like her too, and want to find out more.
AGE MATTERS: It’s an inescapable fact that the majority of romance heroines are in their twenties. The reason for this is that as readers, it’s quite hard to “think ourselves older”. Many people start to read romances in their early teens. At that age, it’s not easy to imagine your way into the head of a middle-aged divorcee with five children. You’re more attracted to heroines who are at the start of their romantic adventures. As we grow older, we enjoy thinking back to what it was like to be innocent and in love for the first time, so the twenty-something heroine wins again.  
LET HER GROW: The most engaging heroines are those who develop during the course of their story. That doesn’t mean to say the love of a good hero has to change your central character from CEO of a multinational to a devoted housewife overnight (or vice versa). The realisation that forging a relationship doesn’t mean sacrificing your individuality is an equally valid character development. For decades, real-life women have been told they can have it all but it isn’t always easy to see how this can be made to happen. Fictional heroines can give their real-life counterparts insight into their own dilemmas – and of course everyone wants to believe in their own happy ever after.
Who is your favourite heroine?
Eden's Temptation, Heroes, Heroines, James Purefoy, work in progress

Holding Out For A Hero…

On 16th March I did a guest blog at http://bit.ly/ZPPDNe about my search for images I could add to the inspiration board I’m using to develop my current work in progress, Eden’s Temptation. I had plenty of ideas of my own, but I love getting feedback from readers. You came up with some great ideas, including Mary Kirkland’s suggestion of Denise Bidot for my heroine. Mary’s prize will be on its way to her soon, but I’m the real winner. I’ve already pinned up three likely lads on my Work In Progress Pinterest Board, and pictures of some suitably “heroic” women will follow as soon as I can find some pinnable images of them. Then I had a revelation as I sat down to write this blog. I remembered a YouTube video that someone put me onto a couple of years ago. How on earth could I have forgotten James Purefoy? If you’ve never seen this before, sit back, relax and enjoy a few minutes of heaven, courtesy of DreamyViper…