Think
Pink! Chick Lit’s Favourite Colour Examined
As every little girl knows, pink is her
colour. The modern mother who reads Demond Morris’s
Babywatching and discovers that the blue of baby boys’
clothes symbolises heavenly good fortune whereas the
pink of girls merely represents flesh may reject it,
but it remains obstinately there as the Essence of Feminity.
Nowhere is this more evident than in bookshops. Walk
into any Waterstones, Books Etc. or Ottakars and what
do you see? Row upon row of chick-lit books, glowing
pinkly in shades from icing-sugar to raspberry. From
Jane Green to Sophie Kinsella, from Isabel Wolff to
Adele Parks, if you’re a woman reader in search
of an entertaining read, you can have any colour as
long as it’s pink.
Yet now, it seems, the decade-long dominance
of pink may be about to change. Next month, Allison
Pearson’s international best-seller, I Don’t
Know How She Does It is being re-jacketed in a sober
navy blue. India Knight’s new book, The Shops,
has its pink shrunk to a mere ribbon. Janet Evanovitch’s
delightfully dizzy bounty-hunter, Stephanie Plum appears
in To the Nines all in day-glo green and purple, without
a trace of her trademark pink. Wendy Holden, after a
brief flirtation with pink in the lettering of Simply
Divine, has stuck to twirling greens and purples. Following
The Llama Parlour, Kathy Lette turned acid yellow, then
mauve. Even Meg Cabot’s The Princess Diaries,
which sported bubblegum pink for its first volume, has
now changed to cooler blues and greens. Has pink had
its day?
India Knight denies the overall brown
effect of The Shops is due to a sea-change in fashion.
“My original very pink jacket for My Life on A
Plate was fabulous, I think, and was much-copied. The
only reason why my pink has shrunk is that The Shops
is non-fiction, and is meant to look like a brown paper
parcel tied with a pink ribbon.” Having said that,
she thinks that her next novel might be given a different
colour, “since every book designer now sticks
women’s books inside pink. The problem is that
pink is immediately friendly and sexy-looking, whereas
blue is butch, green bilious and red too Edwina Currie.”
The more sophisticated, literary end of
the women’s fiction market has in fact been playing
with alternatives to pink for a good couple of years.
Helen Simpson’s outstanding collection of short
stories about modern motherhood, Hey Yeah Right Get
A Life, has three of the words in its title in pink,
but the remaining three in blue and green. Sabine Durrant’s
second novel, The Great Indoors, concerning the late-blooming
emotional life of an interior decorator, brilliantly
uses a Cath Kidston fabric design. Its roses are a vivid
pink, but set against an equally intense blue make it
look witty and stylish. Her first, the best-selling
Having It and Eating It, featured only a single stripe
of pink in among violet, green and red.
“I wanted to have green, but my publisher (Time
Warner) told me that I couldn’t because green
doesn’t sell,” she says. Like Helen Simpson,
her fiction, dubbed “hen-lit”, is concerned
with older women and mothers who may feel pink is more
appropriate for their baby daughters than themselves.
A former publisher turned author, Robyn
Sisman observes dryly that “pink jackets are inadvisable
if aiming at the Booker shortlist, but otherwise a harmless
indicatior of an entertaining read – if the writer
is female. In the case of a male author, pink indicates
pornography and is probably OK for Booker status.”
Her own romantic comedies, such as the best-selling
Just Friends, use pink in such tongue-in-cheek images
as flying pigs, but are several cuts above the kind
of extended magazine-article romp by Jane Green or Sophie
Kinsella. Like Nancy Mitford and Wendy Holden, Sisman’s
brand of romantic fiction keeps its pink well under
control, with her new novel, Week-end in Paris, having
its heroine dressed in rose but gazing out at a blue
Parisian sky.
It is widely agreed among writers of romantic
fiction that the precise shade of pink is all-important.
“I think pink, being my favourite colour, is divinely
lovely, but there is a problem with it on a book-cover
because unless you get exactly the right shade it can
look horribly cutesy – it’s the difference
between Schiaparelli and Barbara Cartland,” says
India Knight. Kate Saunders, author of The Marrying
Game agrees.
“Nobody has ever put pink on me,
but if it sold my books I’d have one the colour
of poo. That said, I do think that chick-lit is just
Mills & Boon under another name, so I don’t
know why they’re trying to ring the changes in
a sub-genre that has always featured a cartoon of a
champagne bottle and a poodle somewhere on the cover.
The lower end of the market gets a sickly pink and publishers
signal that they’ve upped the ante by making the
pink more shocking. It’s all a cliché,
but people shouldn’t be ashamed of it.”
Certainly the rise of fiction by and about
British Asians has made the more vibrant shades of this
controversial colour look a lot more daring. “Pink,”
as Diana Vreeland famously observed, “is the navy-blue
of India,” and lacks the Barbiesque symbolism
it carries here. Tanuja Desai Hidier’s Born Confused,
Meera Syal’s Anita and Me and Monica Ali’s
Brick Lane all feature the startling shades of red-pink
familiar from Indian fabrics and Bollywood posters.
Far from putting readers off, they advertise the fact
that the contents will transport the reader far from
the realms of sickly romance into the moral and social
complexities Jane Austen would have recognised. Syal’s,
which was shortlisted for the 1996 Guardian Fiction
Prize, is almost unbearable to look at in exploiting
a colour clash between its pink background and a girl
in a canary-yellow dress, a reflection of its savagely
funny and biting take on life in multi-racial Britain.
“I don’t think that the boiled
sweet style has had its day, “ says Marianne Velmans,
publisher of Doubleday UK. “It has a legitimate
commercial appeal, but like all genres once someone
has had a success with a certain look, everyone else
jumps on the bandwagon and that prompts the inevitable
back-lash.” Aware of this, Doubleday are now publishing
novels in which pink is used ironically, as in Gigi
Levangie’s Maneater, featuring hot pink and zebra
stripes – with a bite-mark taken out of the cover.
They have also exploited the colour for a “very
worthy pink collection of short stories by leading women
writers, “A Day in the Life”, for Breast
Cancer Care.
Allison Pearson herself denies turning
her back on the colour for the reissue of I Don’t
Know How She Does It. “I must admit I was worried
about having a pink cover at first. I thought it would
shout trivial and lightweight. Now I think the most
important thing is for the book to look desirable, something
you really want to pick up. The reason for the change
in the US and here is that we have had several very
positive reactions from male readers, particularly baffled
husbands of working mothers. However, a few confessed
to being anxious about being seen holding something
so girly-looking on the Tube. Hence the decision to
print a blue “boys’ version”. But
I LOVE my pink jackets – as Kay Thompson says
in Funny Face, “Think Pink!” They’ve
sold 320,000 in hardback in the US and 250 in paperback
here, so the last thing I want to do is spearhead an
anti-pink movement.”
Pink book-jackets also get a thumbs-up
from Alice Rawsthorne, Director of London’s Design
Museum and probably the hippest woman in England.
“With the honourable exception of
Penguin in the 1940s, book publishing isn’t the
best role model for design,” she says. “They
tend to follow trends not lead them. In the 1960s the
groovy young designers tended to do record covers; now
they do web-sites. The dominant trend now is a return
to romanticism. As a culture, we’re at ease with
all colours, and can embrace pink whereas before we
were too embarrassed. There are no taboos any longer.
Pink used to be a sleazy, girly, Diana Dors colour,
emblematic of pink Cadillacs and Las Vegas neon signs,
but its been made respectable. The flesh-pink carpets
of Prada have been an icon of modern chic since the
1990s, and the pink cladding of the Laban dance centre
in Deptford by leading architects Herzog and de Meuran
mean it’s seen as THE cutting edge colour. Pearson’s
novel is emblematic of intelligent chick-lit, and its
pink shows the influence of post-feminism, and the confidence
women feel. If publishers are abandoning it now, it
just shows how conservative and out-of-touch they are.”
The truth is that all colours have different
shades of symbolism and significance, and pink is no
worse a colour than any other. Personally, I have always
hated pink for exactly the same reason that Maria, the
heroine of Elizabeth Goudge’s classic children’s
novel, The Little White Horse did. Like her, I have
red hair – and red with pink clashes horribly.
Yes as Maria discovers, all colours come from God, and
as such should be welcomed and celebrated. Yes, it is
the colour of nasty sweets, plastic dolls, processed
pork and synthetic feminity. Yet it is also the colour
of flamingos, of Indian weddings, of roses, lilies,
daisies and dianthus. It is the colour that the Nazis
made gay men wear as a badge of shame, which Gay Pride
redeemed as a badge of courage. It is the colour of
the dawn, and the sunset; and it is the colour my little
girl loved the best and wore the most - before she grew
sophisticated, and turned to black.
Amanda Craig’s new novel, Love
in Idleness, is published by Little,Brown £12.99
The Daily Telegraph, September 2003
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