Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Harriet

Rate this book
Shy, dreamy, and incurably romantic, Harriet Poole was shattered when her brief affair with Simon Villiers, Oxford’s leading playboy undergraduate, ended abruptly, leaving her penniless, alone and pregnant. She becomes a nanny to the children of an eccentric scriptwriter and a whole host of visitors begin to arrive to disrupt her routine including of all people, Simon.

Mass Market Paperback

First published December 23, 2010

90 people are currently reading
739 people want to read

About the author

Jilly Cooper

91 books849 followers
Dame Jilly Cooper, OBE (born February 21, 1937) was an English author. She started her career as a journalist and wrote numerous works of non-fiction before writing several romance novels, the first of which appeared in 1975. She was most famous for writing the six blockbuster novels the Rutshire Chronicles.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
587 (33%)
4 stars
544 (30%)
3 stars
471 (26%)
2 stars
126 (7%)
1 star
39 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 66 reviews
443 reviews5 followers
Read
August 9, 2011
Well, I hated myself afterwards, but had a good time while I read it. So sort of like eating a Twinkie.
Profile Image for Chloe.
3 reviews
Read
February 27, 2014
These books are my favourite books. They have marvellous endings and are equally good throughout all the book. I find Harriet very brave for the fact that she keeps her baby. I find Cory delightful and Noël (Cory's ex) dreadful. My favourite characters were Cory children who were hilarious. Harriet is vulnerable but very switched on. I recommend all of this series.
Profile Image for Lady Kate.
49 reviews8 followers
December 21, 2014
This was the first ever novel I read at the tender age of 10. I have a first edition and all the series still sits on my book case. It's typical Jilly Cooper. Every now and then, I re -read this series. I'm giving it 5 stars simply because it gave me my love of novels. If you want to go back to the 70's or early 80's then give it a go, it will only take you a day.
Profile Image for Fiona.
982 reviews526 followers
April 7, 2017
I came across my 1984 diary with a list of all the books I'd read that year. I read a lot of Jilly Cooper but all I can remember is that they were great fun and that all her dogs and cats had clever names.
Profile Image for Tawnie.
256 reviews
February 18, 2008
My favorite Jilly Cooper. It is a delightful 70s romance with all the stereotypical elements. Fabulous!
Profile Image for Elusive.
1,219 reviews57 followers
February 24, 2016
In ‘Harriet’, shy and reserved teenager Harriet Poole falls in love with popular Simon Villiers after a chance meeting. However, she is left pregnant and heartbroken when he breaks up with her. Anyhow, she quietly decides to keep his baby despite him insisting on her having an abortion. She takes up a job as a nanny and works for scriptwriter Cory Erskine in order to financially support herself and her child.

Despite the simple storyline and its predictability, this book was an absolute delight thanks to Cooper’s breezy effortless writing style which made every chapter flow perfectly. For the most part, Harriet was a likeable lead character. Her brief relationship with Simon showed how naïve she was yet it’s hard to blame her as she was genuinely loving and sincere and tried her best to please him. More importantly, she displayed some character growth as she learned to be independent and focused on caring for (the baby) William instead of wallowing in sorrow over Simon.

The romance aspect was pretty good and well developed. The pacing was just right – there was no sudden realization experienced by Harriet and Cory regarding their feelings for each other. Instead, as the reader you just know that somewhere along the way they started to view each other differently, more than their initial clear-cut employer-nanny relationship. It was also convincing as they shared plenty of ups and downs together. Furthermore, despite getting along and having some wonderful conversations, there were times where they argued yet both of them handled the aftermath in a mature way.

Cory’s estranged wife, Noel was aptly unlikeable but she certainly had presence and further livened up the story. I liked that she actually had personality instead of merely being a stereotypical glamorous, gorgeous love rival. Besides that, Cory’s brother – Kit was funny and likeable though he was a womanizer. Although he didn’t appear much, he was memorable. Cory’s kids – Jonah and Chattie behaved the way kids should (something noteworthy since there are books in which the children behave more like adults). Chattie was especially funny. Somehow, Kit’s sense of humour must have rubbed off on her.

The pets were great additions to the story. One of the dogs, Sevenoaks was troublesome yet hilarious and adorable. The other dog, Tadpole and the cat Ambrose (as well as her kittens) were also mischievous at times. I simply can’t imagine how Harriet managed to take care of them coupled with Cory’s kids and her baby. There wasn’t much focus on the struggles and challenges she experienced in terms of her job but it was all realistic enough.

Overall, ‘Harriet’ was a light, charming book filled with plenty of sweet and hilarious moments. It definitely surpassed my expectation.
Profile Image for Crazy About Love 💕.
266 reviews112 followers
December 6, 2021
⭐️⭐️⭐️ three stars -

Solid story, but characters are drawn without much depth really, except for Harriet. We never truly get to know the H.

This reads more like a classic gothic romance. Especially with the drawing of the supporting cast. Nonessential characters in this story are written in classic JC style, and I loved that part of it. There’s so many interesting secondary characters that add to the story, that you mostly don’t notice that there’s not much depth to them, but they truly do add to the overall plot.

Harriet is a wonderful character that’s young, naive, and mostly meek, but is still a pleasure to read. I enjoyed getting to know her, and cheered for her when she finally matured enough at the end of her character arc, and grew into her new role.

The romance between the H and h is written in the old school style, but is 100% fulfilling to this classic romance reader. While I’m not sure if I would reread this one anytime soon, it was still overall a pleasurable read, and JC is such a strong writer that you’re drawn into the world of our h.

Overall, I enjoyed it and definitely felt immersed in the story - something Cooper excels at.

Three solid stars.
Profile Image for Karen.
5,385 reviews74 followers
April 4, 2016
I love books when just down on her luck women get strong despite their situation. Poor Harriet has opportunity to be strongest woman in the world according to her bad luck. I cried real tears. Lovely English book. You may need some translation!
Profile Image for Carrie Elks.
Author 70 books2,223 followers
October 21, 2019
This was a re-read of a book I think I read ten times when I was younger. Jilly Cooper writes a fantastic story - great characters, fun and romantic plots, and has a writing style that feels effortless. Reading this felt like reuniting with an old friend. Lots of good feels!
67 reviews1 follower
October 23, 2008
I read a lot of Jilly Cooper when I was a young teenager and learned an awful lot from her! I loved it at the time and think its about time I read them all again!
Profile Image for Gill McKinlay.
Author 6 books6 followers
May 16, 2015
I'd always wanted to be a writer. This was the first book that made me feel I could do it.
Profile Image for Justine Peroni.
211 reviews1 follower
November 6, 2019
Another good romp!

Having read this in my 20's I felt I had to read it again! Like the others by Jilly Cooper it was an absolute delight to re-read it!
Profile Image for Margo.
2,112 reviews130 followers
May 5, 2023
This was very cute. It is not a category romance, but there’s definitely a distinctive style to this author’s writing. Her heroines are very naïve and young, but they are extremely likable and the people they deal with are very authentic. She is the only person who doesn’t see how crazy the H is about her.
Profile Image for Miranda.
16 reviews
July 30, 2014
Cute, romantic and warming - just want you want from Jilly Cooper.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
9 reviews
July 31, 2009
This book is awful, but good, fun times awful.
Profile Image for HattieB.
443 reviews3 followers
January 7, 2024
This book was a tiresome, boring experience. If anything, its good to see how far fiction has come.
31 reviews1 follower
November 11, 2023
absolutely ridiculous but also great
Profile Image for Rachel.
1,573 reviews141 followers
October 17, 2021
I want to preface this one-star review by saying I am a big-time, long-time fan of Jilly Cooper. I haven’t read everything she’s written because she’s approximately forty years older than me, and the chances are she’ll run out of time to write before I run out of time to read. So I’m rationing them, but when Sara Manning tweeted about this being one of her faves I figured I could dole myself out a small portion.

Two years ago I found Octavia and Emily in a second-hand shop. Up to that time I had been unaware that Cooper wrote these shorter novels before her famous white-cover bonkbusters. I enjoyed them, but felt they were very debut, in that they read like the outline of a book rather than the actual book.

Harriet suffers from that problem along with a host of others. Mostly this has to do with it being published in 1976. One thing Jilly ain’t is forward-thinking. Every single book of hers inhabits the worst version of how women were treated without questioning it, whether this was eighties, nineties, or noughties flavour misogyny. The only saving grace is that the women in the books don’t question it either; to do so would be to destroy the whole edifice. Indeed, romance as a genre is currently grappling with how to write heterosexual love stories in the ruined landscape of what #metoo et al. did to such tropes as ‘alpha male’.

So Harriet embodies the now-defunct stereotype of a hapless, helpless, ditzy female, who is rescued by a much-older male character who combines a father-lover role in a way that is complete anathema to twenty-first century mores. Although all fans of romance probably pine at times to be rescued, as a whole we’ve renounced this trope – and books like this are the reason why.

Harriet begins promisingly. She’s a bright student at Oxford who is knocked down by Simon on her way to a tutorial. Simon is king of the hot dudes on campus, and this is his initial description:

“He was wearing dark grey trousers, a black shirt, and a pale blue velvet coat like Peter Rabbit.”

This is amazing, and one of the gems of the talent that Cooper later hones to perfection.

Sadly, Simon is just using the viriginal Harriet, and soon gets bored of her. Unfortunately, she’s pregnant. Even though he offers to pay for an abortion, and everyone around Harriet is like, ‘Hello? Get an abortion’, Harriet does not get an abortion. Why?

“The reason I kept William really was because he was the only thing of Simon’s I had.”

THIS IS THE WORST RATIONALE FOR PARENTHOOD I HAVE EVER HEARD. And Harriet proceeds to prove them all right, by routinely forgetting her baby exists or needs to be fed even though for most of the action at Cory’s house he’s between three and six months old.

Harriet takes a job as a live-in nanny to a scriptwriter called Cory, who’s getting divorced from his glamorous actor wife Noel. (Why she’s called Noel and not ‘Noelle’ is never explained and drove me wild.) Harriet immediately prioritises Cory’s two children over her own, baby-aged child, to the point of being viciously jealous of the children, er, loving their actual mother best? If it wasn’t for a housekeeper (and omg, like, Harriet has a housekeeper and cook to pick up her slack, nice work if you can get it), her own baby would never be fed and minded. Harriet races to hospital with one of Cory’s children – where the staff proceed to withhold meningitis treatment for no reason except that Cooper appears to be unaware of how medicine works – and abandons her own child for ten whole days. Not only that, she doesn’t think about him once in that time. It's jaw-dropping neglect.

The whole scenario of Harriet dropping out of college and taking a menial job could have been achieved without her having a baby she keeps forgetting about, simply by making her reaction be depression over the abortion or losing Simon. She also wails or whimpers most of her dialogue, which made me want to reach through the page and strangle her.

So, yeah, a completely stupid and unsympathetic heroine, a paper-thin plot, and fucktons of drunk driving. The seventies were lawless. Unsurprisingly, Cooper reads better when she’s more experienced and better edited!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Plum-crazy.
2,466 reviews42 followers
February 25, 2018
This is the third book in the series that I've been re-reading recently & certainly the most palatable one so far. Once again the attitudes, especially those of the men, seem very dated & it's surprising how shocking the idea of an unmarried mother was even into the '70's.

At least I found Harriet to be a rather endearing character (which is more than I can say for Emily & Bella) & at least Cory wasn't a macho brute as some of the previous men have been...although at times he still had a slightly patronising attitude towards Harriet. Overall I found it a much more likeable story & I can see the basic premise working well as a rom-com.
Profile Image for Lynn Smith.
2,038 reviews34 followers
October 24, 2020
Love Harriet and is my favourite of all these Jilly Cooper romance novels. A simple plotline, predictable ending but absolutely delightful to read. Dastardly cad Simon who leaves Harriet pregnant and to bring up his baby alone, bitchy and awful ex-wife (Noel) of writer Cory who employs Harriet as nanny to his children.
Profile Image for Janis.
53 reviews2 followers
March 10, 2013
Think Barbara Cartland in 70s guise..
68 reviews1 follower
February 20, 2023
so dated and of it's time! sexist, mysoginistic, racist - and a simpering, weak kneed heroine
Profile Image for Julia.
346 reviews9 followers
October 29, 2022
Harriet, a pretty, Oxford student of English, falls pregnant to the successful, flashy, Simon: the good-looking man about town, whom all the girls admire and adore; although as is usually the case with these types of people: much less could be said regarding his character.

It goes without saying that despite Harriet's innocence & naivety in believing that he would be interested in pursuing a relationship with her, that for those of us with more life experience: he would not have the slightest interest in a merely pretty, educated girl without the wit, flashy beauty & street smarts to survive in his jungle of status and success. For Simon, she is just another notch on the bed post.

Harriet gives birth to a son she names William, and takes up a post with Cory, a divorced writer, from the stunningly beautiful actress, Noel, as a Nanny to their small children, in order to avoid shaming her family, should their friends discover that Harriet is pregnant outside of wedlock...

While I do not find Cooper's writing to be poor, it does straddle itself between Mills & Boon and proper literature, disappearing into the Bermuda Triangle of the literary world, as it were.

It hasn't aged well and the theme of nice girls finishing first is unfortunately lost now to the culture of our modern world. Perhaps it was more so fifty years ago.

Having said this, I would probably be interested in reading another of Cooper's novels in the future.
Profile Image for Book-Social.
499 reviews11 followers
November 15, 2020
Jilly Cooper is a legend in my eyes with her Rutshire Chronicles being some of my favourite ever reads. Coming off the back of a very weighty read Harriet, a 280 page standalone romance, was truly a sight for sore eyes. Sure there was no Rupert Campbell Black (I’ve gone off him anyhow) instead there was troubled writer Cory, his bitchy estranged wife Noel and single parent Harriet the hopeless romantic. You knew what was going to happen from the get go yet it didn’t matter. Close the curtains, get the fire going and settle in for the duration.

The book was first published in the 70s and now, some 40 odd years later, it shows. Certain cultural references certainly wouldn’t be accepted by an editor and Harriet is very much the scarlett woman having had a baby out of wedlock. It was also strange to read about a hunt meeting taking place. I did find Harriet a touch too weak and Cory a touch too unlikeable. Cooper walks the line perfectly in the Rutshire Chronicles published nearly 10 years later and you can tell when you read Harriet. The foundation stones are there, (the animals especially the horses) but they are not quite the finished article. I nevertheless enjoyed the book and finished it in two days. For those in need of being ‘kissed so ferociously you almost lose consciousness’, it’s just the tonic.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 66 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.