
I have a fondness for romances. You know, the ones that look like real literature and that, even if you're just gagging for the bit when Captain Wentworth writes the note to Anne Eliot, or a man turns up on a horse sweating a bit, or David Copperfield gets it on with Dora. (Not French ones though. They only ever end badly.)
But I like the other ones too. The pink English ones written after 1995. I refuse to use the term
chick-lit, as I am not a "chick" (the word implies thigh-high boots, ironed streaked blonde hair, a rather plain face and nights out on the town with the girls in nightclubs in Cheltenham); and I'm not sure that they're "literature" either, whatever that is. But if I'm feeling weak in the head, or a bit ill, or just generally a bit drippy, one of the most effective cures is a quick trip to a charity shop with a fiver in your pocket which will, on average, buy you three novels with squirly writing on the front and the promise of a happy ending. And that to me is an afternoon's escapism, from which I emerge revived and ready to fight with bears in the street, using only my bare hands and a small jar of Bovril.
That Daisy Goodwin has had a programme on the telly recently that has proven with Scientific Fact that reading romances is good for you. Apparently they lower your heart rate to an almost standstill on the sofa, which I have known for years. She gets bang on my tits, what with her little poetry collections and her Executive Producing and her own televisual entertainment programmes, and she's got an annoying voice and that, but I have to thank her - even vaguely - for making me feel slightly better about my Dark Habit. I mean her programme was on BBC4 and everything, which means it must be OK.
Most of them are un-readable, mind you. About 70% of the books I buy from Oxfam when weak in the head are hurled across the room in disgust before I scrape them back up, slightly battered, and return them to Oxfam to sell again. The thing is, I want to hate Miriam Keane, but I don't. Maeve Binchy is very soothing. I read a Jenny Colgan book last Tuesday afternoon and it was really quite funny, although I can't actually remember what it was about. I think there was a dog in it. I once spent a week reading
The Barchester Chronicles and Jilly Cooper. Not at the same time, obv - I sort of mixed them up a bit. (The Warden/Octavia. Barchester Towers/Polo. That sort of thing. Very interesting.)

Last night I was in an insomniac mangle. There are only ever three solutions to insomnia: 1) a list; 2) Tamazepam; 3) a rubbish novel. (The fourth is prodding awake a slumbering Gentleman Caller and asking for a quick game of Scrabble, but gentlemen I am interested in are not freely available for board games at the time of writing.) And what did I find?
P.S. I love you by Cecelia Ahern, the 12 year old half-wit daughter of an Irish Prime Minister who did a 'Media and Communications Degree' (what is this thing?) and is, I think, the sister-in-law of a member of boyband favourites, Westlife. Apparently it was top of the best-seller charts in Germany for fifty-two weeks. Apparently Hilary Swank is going to be in the film they're making of it in the Hollywood. Apparently it is a "wonderfully life-affirming witty debut". No it is not. It is cock, and it is unreadable. Let me share with you some extracts of Miss Ahern's wonderfully life-affirming prose.
"Her heart leaped as he lowered his boxers, caught them on the tip of his toes and flung them at her where they landed on her head."
"Leo paused in what he was doing and watched her with amusement. 'I always thought you were for the madhouse. No one ever listens to me.'
She laughed even harder. 'Oh, I'm sorry Leo. I don't know what's wrong with me, I just can't stop.' Holly's stomach ached from laughing so hard and she was aware of all the curious glances she was attracting but she just couldn't help it. It was as if all the missed mirth from the past couple of months were tumbling out at once."
"She had settled on wearing an all-black outfit to suit her current mood. Black fitted trousers slimmed her legs and were tailored perfectly to sit over her black boots. A black corset that made her look like she had a bigger chest finished the outfit off perfectly. Leo had done a wonderful job on her hair, tying it up and allowing strands to fall in loose waves around her shoulders. Holly ran her fingers through her hair and smiled at the memory of her time at the hairdressers..."If this 503 page cavalcade of wank (written in the style of Muffin the Mule with a packet of crayons) has made someone into a best-selling author, then take heart.
Anything you have ever written is better than this. So if you're trying to write a book and you're crippled with self-doubt, I suggest getting down to Oxfam and buying this book. (You'll find at least ten copies nestled next to 1976's splendid
Dairy Book of Home Cookery). One glance at Ahern and you'll have written next year's Nobel Prize winner by the end of the week.