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Recommend me a book with a middle aged woman protagonist

96 replies

AlyssumandHelianthus · 26/04/2023 23:34

I want to feel inspired and hopeful after I read it!
Fried green tomatoes at the whistle stop cafe was a good one in this line.

OP posts:
MobyJeff · 26/04/2023 23:37

All Fun and games until someone loses an eye by Christopher brookmyre.

bluebeardswife7 · 26/04/2023 23:41

Sue Townsend. Rebuilding Coventry. Amazing.

Codlingmoths · 26/04/2023 23:42

Would you take some late 70s women? The thursday murder club books.
fantasy - jacky Leon is 40 or a bit over in the Jacky Leon books.

AlyssumandHelianthus · 27/04/2023 09:41

Ooh! Thank you! I haven't read very many of these.
I've read the Thursday murder club books, but I would take over 70s women :-)

OP posts:
GoneTillNovember · 27/04/2023 09:42

Diary of an Ordinary Woman was good, it's actually through all different ages but very women-centred and I enjoyed it.

Tidsleytiddy · 27/04/2023 10:23

The Woman Who Went To Bed For A Year by Sue Townsend. Brilliant and funny x

CoutureBakes · 27/04/2023 10:33

The Secret gift of Lucia Lemon by Celia Anderson

Latenightreader · 27/04/2023 10:55

Miss Ranskill Comes Home, which is published by Persephone. She has been shipwrecked on an island for some years and returns to England during WW2. I thought it was lovely. Persephone have a lot of women focussed stories, it is worth perusing their website.

DoverWight · 27/04/2023 10:55

The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires by Grady Hendrix

Allthegoodnamesarechosen · 27/04/2023 11:00

Penelope Fitzgerald ‘The Bookshop’ ( but it is sad). ‘Offshore’ has a heroine who is definitely not a girl.
Many of Penelope Lively books have middle aged or older heroines, or follow the heroine through her life.

MagpiePi · 27/04/2023 11:05

Old Baggage by Lissa Evans.
It's about a suffragette a few years after women got the vote. Its not laugh out loud, but is a lighthearted book.

Lissa was a producer and director for Father Ted.

I've just seen that this is the first in a trilogy, so off to find Crooked Heart and V for Victory!

garlictwist · 27/04/2023 12:47

Most of Anne Tyler's books have a middle aged protagonist. Breathing Lessons is her best by far.

Cinnamonandcoal · 27/04/2023 12:49

The Walworth Beauty

DumDeeDoh · 27/04/2023 12:51

Strange Sally Diamond by Liz Nugent

They never learn by Layne Fargo

ZittiEBuoni · 27/04/2023 12:53

Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout

Blackcountryexile · 27/04/2023 13:01

The Keeper of Stories by Sally Page
Miss Benson's Beetle by Rachel Joyce
A Single Thread by Tracy Chevalier

AuntieDolly · 27/04/2023 13:07

Miss pettigrew lives for a day - oldie but goodie

GreenDressy · 27/04/2023 13:08

garlictwist · 27/04/2023 12:47

Most of Anne Tyler's books have a middle aged protagonist. Breathing Lessons is her best by far.

Yes, I came on here to say this 😊

SheilaFentiman · 27/04/2023 13:11

The Elegant Gathering of White Snows

CarolinaInTheMorning · 27/04/2023 13:12

garlictwist · 27/04/2023 12:47

Most of Anne Tyler's books have a middle aged protagonist. Breathing Lessons is her best by far.

Another vote for almost anything by Anne Tyler. Ladder of Years is my favorite.

ChocolateCroissantCafe · 27/04/2023 13:16

An older one but The Enchanted April by Elizabeth von Arnim is about a group of women of various ages. It was partially inspired by the same destination as the Hotel Portofino TV series.

Chickenkorma64 · 27/04/2023 13:23

The Vera books by Anne Cleeves

longtompot · 27/04/2023 14:18

Pretty much anything by Isla Dewar

JustFuckingTired · 27/04/2023 14:26

"A Thousand Ships" by Natalie Haynes.
It retells the story of the Trojan war from the perspective of the women. I wouldn't usually go for books on ancient/mythical stuff but I absolutely loved this one. The women were well-written and felt so real. I felt very connected to them across the divides of reality/fiction, now/then, here/there.
I particularly enjoyed reading Penelope's (wife of Odysseus) accounts.

"Bitter Orange" and "Unsettled Ground" by Claire Fuller are also excellent. Not necessarily 'middle aged' women I don't think but women in their 30s trying to keep shit together. Fabulous books.

Welshwabbit · 27/04/2023 14:35

Mrs Dalloway. Read it when I was a teenager and hated it. Read it again this year (now 43) and loved it.