Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Riders to Tackle! / Why Britain loved Jilly Cooper's raunchy books

 

Getty Images Portrait of Jilly Cooper on a chaise longue (Credit: Getty Images)Getty Images
Before writing novels, Cooper was a columnist for The Sunday Times and The Mail on Sunday (Credit: Getty Images)


Riders to Tackle!: Why Britain loved Jilly Cooper's raunchy books

Clare Thorp


Jilly Cooper, who died yesterday, was beloved in the UK. Her irresistible sagas of sex and shenanigans among England's rural upper-middle class society – featuring dashing cads, ambitious women, and a supporting cast of horses, hounds and huge country houses – have been bestsellers since the 1980s. What made her books so enduringly appealing?

Despite being a nation with a reputation for prudishness about sex, the British don't seem to have any problem reading about it, at least not if you go by the enduring popularity of one the country's most successful writers, Jilly Cooper. Jilly Cooper, who died yesterday, was something of a national treasure in the UK. Known as the Queen of the "bonkbuster" (a British term for a popular novel stuffed with salacious storylines and frequent sexual encounters), she even counted the former British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak as one of her fans.

For those who came of age in the UK in the 1980s or 90s, the covers of Cooper's raunchy books alone are forever imprinted on their memory, such was their ubiquity on bookshelves and sun loungers, or in schools, where they were shared like contraband by teenage girls.

Riders, the first of her famous Rutshire Chronicles, features a woman clad in tight white jodhpurs, a man's hand intimately resting on her buttock. One of its many successful sequels, Rivals, shows a red stiletto grinding into a man's hand. So familiar are these images that when Cooper's publisher reissued Riders in 2015, readers immediately noticed – and were aghast – that the man's hand had been moved a few inches higher, to a less provocative position (Cooper herself was "livid" at the change).

Her characters manage to be deeply melodramatic, while never taking themselves too seriously

If the covers are iconic, it's what's beneath them that has made Cooper one of Britain's most popular and biggest-selling authors for the last four decades. Cooper wrote irresistible sagas of sex and shenanigans among England's rural upper-middle class society, featuring dashing cads, ambitious women, and a supporting cast of horses, hounds and huge country houses. The behaviour is bad, the sex copious, the parties raucous and the overall mood… well, rather jolly. Her characters manage to be deeply melodramatic, while never taking themselves too seriously.

Alamy The 1985 novel Rivals was the first of the Rutshire Chronicles, a series about adultery and scandal among the British upper-class (Credit: Alamy)Alamy
The 1985 novel Rivals was the first of the Rutshire Chronicles, a series about adultery and scandal among the British upper-class (Credit: Alamy)

Over her career, Cooper wrote multiple number one bestsellers and sold more than 11 million books. In 2018 she was awarded a CBE for services to literature. In 2023, she published her 18th novel, Tackle! – the 10th in the racy Rutshire Chronicles. In it, the action – of all varieties – was set in the world of professional football (the cover image features – what else – a woman slipping a red card down the front of a man's shorts).

Its release was welcomed enthusiastically by her devoted fans. For an author whose books are filled with snobbery, Cooper has attracted surprisingly little. She's read by both men and women, adored by fellow writers including Ian Rankin, Helen Fielding and Marian Keyes, and loved by Cambridge academics. When Sunak came out as a fan of Cooper's books, he explained that "you need to have escapism in your life". Her popularity recently received an extra boost from the hit TV adaptation of Rivals, which premiered on Disney+ last autumn.

"People really love these books and they're quite forthright about it," says Amy Burge, associate professor in Popular Fiction at Birmingham University, who has interviewed Jilly fans for a book on the bonkbuster she is writing with Jodi McAlister, senior lecturer in Writing, Literature and Culture at Deakin University. "It's much less the guilty part and much more the pleasure part that comes out."

Getty Images The Rutshire Chronicles are set in a fictional English county; Cooper moved to Gloucestershire in the 1980s (Credit: Getty Images)Getty Images
The Rutshire Chronicles are set in a fictional English county; Cooper moved to Gloucestershire in the 1980s (Credit: Getty Images)

The worlds that Cooper wrote about aren't a million miles away from her own. Born in Essex in 1937 into an upper-middle class family, she spent her childhood in Yorkshire before being sent to a boarding school. Her career didn't start off well – she got sacked from 22 consecutive jobs – but her breakthrough came when she landed a column in The Sunday Times. This led to the publication of her first book in 1969, an advice tome called How to Stay Married, followed by How to Survive from Nine to Five. In 1975, she published her first work of fiction, a romantic novel called Emily – followed by Bella, Imogen, Prudence, Harriet and Octavia.

Horse and hound

But it was with her 1985 novel Riders – the first of her Rutshire Chronicles – that Cooper's success skyrocketed. Set in the Cotswold countryside, Riders depicted fallouts, frolicking and fornication in the world of showjumping. Its hero, horse trainer and lothario Rupert Campbell-Black, was partly inspired by Andrew Parker-Bowles, the ex-husband of Queen Camilla. The book was an immediate hit, spawning multiple sequels, each set in a different, though equally glamorous world – art, classical music, the TV industry, polo.

One thing bonkbusters did was acknowledge that sex is important. It's an important part of life. It can be fun, but it can also be all kinds of other things – Amy Burge

Though the term "bonkbuster" didn't arrive until 1988 (coined by the writer Sue Limb when her publisher asked her to write "a big, thick book with lots of bonking in it"), Cooper's books were part of a new genre of romantic fiction characterised by frequent and explicit sexual encounters. In Riders, that included one scene where the journalist Janey gets stung by nettles, causing show-jumper Billy Lloyd-Foxe to find a creative use for dock leaves.

Getty Images Cooper's books have been bestsellers since the 1980s (Credit: Getty Images)Getty Images
Cooper's books have been bestsellers since the 1980s (Credit: Getty Images)

Daisy Buchanan, author of books including Insatiable and Limelight, host of the You're Bookedpodcast and Jilly Cooper superfan, first discovered the writer as a teenager. "I think I was about 13 when I fell in love with Jilly's books," she tells BBC Culture. "Riders and Rivals were being passed around at school, almost 20 years after they were first published, which is a testament to her power. Her stories are dramatic, extravagant, escapist tales – but while she sets her books in glamorous worlds, her characters are so vulnerable, loveable and human. It's only in Jilly-land where you get heroines who triumph while feeling self-conscious about their spots."

As it had for millions of readers before her, the sex left a lasting impression, too. "She was the first writer I read who talked openly about women seeking pleasure," says Buchanan. "She's not the first writer to write about sex, but I think she's one of the first to show sex on the page that is tender, joyful and loving – and to say that you don't need to be perfect to seek those sexual experiences. In her stories, sex is sometimes Earth-shatteringly profound, and sometimes simply fun."

Escapist and educational?

This positive attitude to sex was a huge influence when Buchanan started writing her own novels. "My first novel, Insatiable, wouldn't exist if it wasn't for Jilly Cooper's novels," she says. "Jilly's books formed my emotional sex education, and Insatiable… owes an enormous debt to Rivals and Riders. I wanted to write escapist sex with real emotions."

But while there is much to celebrate in Cooper's portrayals of sex, it wasn't always fun – or consensual. "There are rapes that happen in Jilly's books, and it is very rare that the rapist has any kind of comeuppance," says Burge. In one particularly disturbing scene in Riders, Rupert coerces his wife Helen into a sexual act. "It's a really horrible scene," says Burge. "Those aspects are difficult to read now."

Despite Campbell-Black's frequently appalling treatment of women, he's continued to be the hero of Cooper's books. As for feminists, they are rarely sympathetic in her novels, and usually marked by their hairy legs. Cooper was, of course, of a different era– as evidenced in 2023 in an interview with The Sunday Times. She said that the #MeToo movement has made people too "tense" and "anxious" about sex. "I'm quite depressed about sex at the moment. I don't think people are having nearly as much fun."

In her fictional worlds, though, there's still plenty of fun to be had. Tackle! saw the return of Campbell-Black (now a reformed and faithful husband), who buys ailing local football club Searston Rovers and propels them to the Champions League. If it sounds like Cooper has been binging Ted Lasso and Welcome to Wrexham, her interest in football was actually sparked by a lunch with Alex Ferguson, while Searston Rovers were loosely based on her local team, Forest Green Rovers, owned by eco-millionaire Dale Vince.

Getty Images Before writing novels, Cooper was a columnist for The Sunday Times and The Mail on Sunday (Credit: Getty Images)Getty Images
Before writing novels, Cooper was a columnist for The Sunday Times and The Mail on Sunday (Credit: Getty Images)

Like all of Cooper's novels, there was a huge cast of characters in Tackle! (she started each of her books with a who's who list of names). Besides Campbell-Black there are footballers called Feral Jackson, Facundo Gonzales and Midas Channing ("rather chubby but smiling Searston striker"), along with wives and girlfriends with names like Charmaine Channing and Daffodil Clark-Rogers ("a deeply daffy WAG").

What readers might have noticed slightly less of though, is the actual sex. It was still in there, but somewhat tamer than her earlier books (even though she says her publishers pushed her to include more). Cooper said she found it "quite difficult" to write sex scenes later in life.

If the pressure was on for her books to be full of filth, it may be because she was the last bastion of the genre as we knew it. Collins died in 2015, Krantz in 2019, and Conran in 2024. Could the death of national treasure Cooper spell the end of the bonkbuster? 

Young people are apparently less entertained by sex in popular culture now. A recent study by the Center for Scholars and Storytellers (CSS) at UCLA said found that half of Gen Z would prefer to see less sex on screen and more platonic relationships. Movies already have fewer sex scenes.


In literary fiction, sex is ever present but is often used as a device to explore issues of consent, misogyny and identity. "There are a lot of sexually explicit books that feel quite dark and gritty – and my friends and I just want pure sauce!" says Buchanan. "I love the work of writers like Abby Jimenez, Akwaeke Emezi and Melanie Blake – they are great at writing sex that is fun to read, and genuinely erotic. They are upholding Jilly's legacy, and I hope I am too."

Burge points to TikTok, where the #spicybooks hashtag has billions of views. It was TikTok that helped drive the enormous success of Colleen Hoover, whose books lean more heavily into traditional romance than Cooper's, but also contain plenty of sex.

The Disney+ adaptation of Rivals – starring Aidan Turner, David Tennant, Alex Hassell, Danny Dyer and Katherine Parkinson – has pulled  in a whole new generation of Jilly Cooper fans, and a second series is hotly anticipated. There was so much sex in the first season, on which Cooper was an executive producer, that Disney+ hired two intimacy coordinators for the set.

Turner – who played Declan O'Hara – has said making it was the most fun he's had on any job in his career. A dose of pure pleasure is always welcome, and, Cooper was an expert at spreading joy.

This article was orginally published on 9 November 2023. It has been updated following the announcement of Jilly Cooper's death on 5 October 2025.


BBC



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