As I grow older, I’ve become more and more aware of ageism,
much of it I’m sure is unintentional, but it would seem it’s way down the list
of taboos. Recently there has been a ridiculous stand-off on social media between
older people moaning about so called Millennials and Millennials whining about
Boomers. And perhaps by using the word moaning in relation to the older generation
and whining in relation to the younger I have just displayed a form of ageism
myself. (I was trying to be a good writer and not re-use a word.) A young
Tweeter recently announced that ‘OK Boomer is not OK anymore.’ It never was
OK! Currently there's a particulary nasty hashtag regarding Boomers on Twitter being used by a few members of a younger generation. But far from all and neither do I assume that all Millennials do nothing but eat avocados.
Ageism can be aimed at and disadvantage people of any
age but in literature older people often find themselves totally invisible or if
they do exist, depicted as the elderly eccentric or a stereotyped ‘amazing older
person’ who pluckily joins in the action and surprises everyone including themselves! (Not
that I’m against being bold or eccentric as I grow older but I’m not quite
ready for that portrayal.) Literature’s older people are often written only as
minor characters or in unflattering lights, or where there is an older main character, the content is often them recalling their youth. Their current life
is of little or no interest and they are merely waiting out their last years until death like the charming Mrs Palfrey at The Claremont by Elizabeth Taylor.
Some authors have successfully bucked this trend. Harold
Fry certainly took advantage of his retired years (The Unlikley Pilgrimage
of Harold Fry by Rachel Joyce) as did Allan Karlsson (The Hundred-Year-Old
Man who Climbed Out of a Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson, along
with his fellow Swedes featured in Catharina Ingleman-Sundberg’s The Little
Old Lady Who Broke All the Rules and its sequels, albeit in a somewhat
surreal world!
Joanna Cannon’s Three Things About Elsie and Emma
Healey’s Elizabeth Is Missing were poignant and had beautifully
portrayed characters that showed a realistic, but nevertheless frail depiction
of older age.
Joanna Nell’s comedy The Single Ladies of Jacaranda
Retirement Village and Josephine’s Wilson’s Extinctions take a much more
positive view, although they are realistic in that issues we may experience as
we age are never far away, in these two very different books set in Australian
retirement villages.
I have recently come across another Australian author,
Liz Byrski, whose characters are mostly women in their 50s to 70s and are shown
in positive ways, even when illness or other issues affecting older people are evident,
such as bereavement after a long marriage. Their friendships grow and they overcome
barriers as they take on new challenges.
Hilary Boyd’s novel Thursdays in the Park features
60-year-old grandma, Jeannie, who falls in love with a fellow grandparent after
several meetings at the park with their respective grandchildren. Published in
2012, the book received some harsh criticism, presumably from younger people, because
it was about people in their 60s having and enjoying sex. Apparenty that's not allowed. Someone called Lindsay Mannering on CafeMom website claims she's 'all for the elderly going at it' but I doubt she believes they do as she goes on to write:
“So! All you blue hairs out there!
Or you yet to be blue hairs who think you're too old to read Fifty Shades! Sounds like this gran-lit book
is right up your alley. As America's baby boomers settle into retirement, maybe
this book can help them visualize a sexy-time life outside of playing bridge
and yelling at the news, or whatever it is that retired people do.”
It might be allowable for a few Boomers to
have a moan about this Millennial's attitude. Eight years on, I hope Jeannie’s having a better
sex life, none of which was explicit in the novel, than this person who admits she hadn't read the book.
I've read books with older characters, indeed I read one claiming to be a comedy that even had Boomer in the title. I thought it was dreadful, mainly because the characters all behaved like very immature 20 somethings or were the stereotype quirky eccentric. It wasn't funny either.
Recently on Twitter a writer asked what age were the protagonists in people’s WIPs. Joanna Nell’s was the first response I saw with ‘89.’ There were 266 responses (at the time of writing this) and I jotted down the answers. I don’t know the genres of the responders’ WIPs but some were evidently fantasy and otherworld writers as characters were ranged from 130 years old to 12,000!
Recently on Twitter a writer asked what age were the protagonists in people’s WIPs. Joanna Nell’s was the first response I saw with ‘89.’ There were 266 responses (at the time of writing this) and I jotted down the answers. I don’t know the genres of the responders’ WIPs but some were evidently fantasy and otherworld writers as characters were ranged from 130 years old to 12,000!
I guess a number of WIPs were aimed at children and YA
genres as children and teens were well represented. I wasn’t surprised to learn that characters in their
20s and 30s were the most represented, 40s less so but still a fair number. I
spotted only one protagonist in their 50s. Mine at 60 were alone as was the
89-year old! Now this may tell us more that the writers who happened to see
that tweet were themselves the younger writers out there, which is good to see.
But are older writers writing older main characters? And if we are, are we
getting published? I’ve had no success with my novel about a 60-year old so
far!
Let me know if you have written novels with older protagonists or have recommendations (with links to reviews, if available) about good novels with interesting characters in their 50s to 70s so I can do a follow up post.