
The chick lit fans have all grown up, got married and started reading ‘mum lit’. Christina Hopkinson’s book about a housework-shy husband exemplifies the new genre The Pile of Stuff at the Bottom of the Stairs was snapped up by Hodder, after a bidding war that, according to press reports, resulted in a “six-figure sum” for two novels. Author Christina Hopkinson, who looks like a slightly cross version of Teri Polo from Meet the Parents , wrinkles her nose in distaste at the subject: “You’ve seen the piece in the Bookseller, right? Well, they’re right. What’s normally so irksome about those stories is when someone says: ‘I had a week off work, and I wrote three chapters, and got a deal on the strength of that.’ It sounds so effortless. But this was a complete book. It wasn’t effortless.” Anecdotes put the deal at a quarter of a million pounds, which is huge news. An industry that claims, always, to be in the doldrums, can still muster headying sums for “mum lit”. The reason this market holds such a fascination for publishers is that it is nothing like as saturated as that for chick lit, whose readers are growing up. The romantic tropes won’t serve for a whole lifetime in mainstream fiction. There needs to be a second chapter: post-happy-ever-after, pre-divorce. Plenty of authors would be happy, or at least not enraged, to place themselves in this genre – India Knight , Mink Elliott and the under-rated Fiona Gibson . But there is more to it than simply being a book by a woman, about a woman with a family. There is more, even, than the suggestion – floated by the Bookseller and echoed in the book’s cover design – that the publishers hope to have discovered the new Allison Pearson (whose first novel, I Don’t Know How She Does It has sold more than a million copies in the UK, and who also done well in the US). Hopkinson’s book was sold on its Big Idea: what’s the thing you hate most about the one you love? What makes your heart beat faster when you don’t want to have sex because you’re too tired? (Tidying; tidying and arguing.) That’s what makes this mum