When Bridget Jones fans discovered the lead romantic character in the novels had been killed off in the latest book, reactions ranged from horror to fury.
Many were at a loss to understand why the writer would have introduced such
an unwelcome twist in the life of the fictional diarist.
But Bridget’s creator, Helen Fielding, has now shed some light on why Mark
Darcy, the focus of the heroine’s affections through the first two best-selling
novels, did not survive into the third.
The answer, it seems, could lie in the author’s own past, when her father was
killed in a car accident.
Fielding was aged just 24 at the time and her loss made her realise that life
does not always have happy endings, she revealed.
“It was horrible and shocking and it made me very aware that life is
complicated and precarious,” she said.
“It’s like the keys of a piano, isn’t it? There are white notes and black
notes. And there’s a tragicomic element in my writing; the happy ending is just
where you choose to end a book. Life, with all its twists and turns, carries on
beyond it.”
In this spirit, the new Bridget Jones novel, called Mad About the Boy, finds Bridget older and after “tough things have happened to her.”
Yet it is not all gloom and misery.
Despite the “blows”, Bridget still manages to find the “lightness in life”, her creator said.
Meanwhile the modern day reality is that things have changed for middle-aged women and their “sell-by dates” are being extended.
Bridget is now 51, but her shelf life is far from nearing its end.
More
In this spirit, the new Bridget Jones novel, called Mad About the Boy, finds Bridget older and after “tough things have happened to her.”
Yet it is not all gloom and misery.
Despite the “blows”, Bridget still manages to find the “lightness in life”, her creator said.
Meanwhile the modern day reality is that things have changed for middle-aged women and their “sell-by dates” are being extended.
Bridget is now 51, but her shelf life is far from nearing its end.
More
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