Steven McIntoshEntertainment reporter
Sophie Kinsella’s books have sold more than 50 million copies in more than 60 countries
Sophie Kinsella, author of the bestselling Shopaholic series of novels, has been remembered as a “wonderful, warm woman” following her death at the age of 55.
The writer, whose real name is Madeleine Sophie Wickham, was diagnosed with an aggressive form of brain cancer in 2022.
Me Before You author Jojo Moyes, who has known Kinsella for 20 years, told BBC News she had “never met anybody who carried more grace”.
“She was incredibly kind, incredibly smart, and she wore her success and her brilliance so lightly,” she said.
“There was not a person who met her who didn’t light up in her presence, because she was just good and kind, and people felt that through her characters,” Moyes told the BBC’s David Sillito.
“She was one of the best people I’ve ever met… I feel really glad to have known her, really lucky to have had her in my life.”
How ‘little treats’ helped Sophie Kinsella through cancer
Kinsella’s books have sold more than 50 million copies in more than 60 countries, and have been translated into more than 40 languages.
Author Jodi Picoult said Kinsella “will be missed greatly”, while fellow novelist Adele Parks described her as a “wonderful, warm woman” who “brought so much joy to the world”.
“She’ll be missed so much but celebrated too and will live on in millions of minds and hearts,” Parks said.
Writer Jenny Colgan added: “Every one of Sophie’s 40 million readers knew how funny and smart she was on the page. She was the same in real life, except even kinder, even smarter, and modest to a totally ridiculous degree.”
Sarah Cresswell
Kinsella, pictured in 2024, had been diagnosed with a glioblastoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer
Kinsella announced in 2024 that she had been diagnosed with a glioblastoma two years earlier.
In a statement on Wednesday, her family said they were “heartbroken” to announce the death of “our beloved Sophie”.
“She died peacefully, with her final days filled with her true loves: family and music and warmth and Christmas and joy.”
They continued: “We can’t imagine what life will be like without her radiance and love of life.
“Despite her illness, which she bore with unimaginable courage, Sophie counted herself truly blessed – to have such wonderful family and friends, and to have had the extraordinary success of her writing career.
“She took nothing for granted and was forever grateful for the love she received. She will be missed so much our hearts are breaking.”
‘Unique voice’
A statement from Kinsella’s publisher said she “defined and elevated romantic comedy by populating her stories with real-life issues that combined wit, emotional depth and societal insight”.
Bill Scott-Kerr, her longstanding publisher at Transworld, described Kinsella as “our author, our cheerleader, our fellow conspirator and our friend”.
He added: “Maddy leaves behind a glorious and indelible legacy, a unique voice, an unquenchable spirit, a goodness of intent and a body of work that will continue to inspire us to reach higher and be better, just like so many of her characters.”
British romantic comedy writer Jill Mansell offered: “Maddy was a brilliant writer but more importantly a truly lovely person.
“In both respects she brought so much joy to the world.”
Sarah Cresswell
The author’s agents Araminta Whitley and Marina de Pass described Kinsella as “an intelligent, imaginative, loving and irreverent woman who valued the deeply connective power of fiction”.
“She had a rare gift for creating emotionally resonant protagonists and stories that spoke to, and entertained, readers wherever they were in the world and whatever challenges they faced.”
They added: “She also had an unmatched wit and ability to find the funny side.
“Comedy, for her, was both an art form and an intellectual pursuit and she instinctively understood that it is often a tightrope act of balancing light with dark.”
Moyes agreed, telling the BBC: “The big mistake people make with Sophie’s books is they assume they were easy [to write] because they’re easy to read.
“But anybody who’s tried to replicate them knows that she was a master plotter, and a master at characterisation. She was a genius, actually.”
Getty Images
Kinsella wrote last year that she had “always processed my life through writing”
Kinsella was born in London in 1969, and studied music at New College, Oxford, before switching to philosophy, politics and economics.
She wrote her first novel, The Tennis Party, aged 24 under her married name Madeleine Wickham, while working as a financial journalist.
“My overriding concern was that I didn’t write the autobiographical first novel,” she told the Guardian in 2012. “I was so, so determined not to write about a 24-year-old journalist.
“It was going to have male characters, and middle-aged people, so I could say, look, I’m not just writing about my life, I’m a real author.”
The book was acclaimed by critics and became a top 10 bestseller. She released six further novels as Madeleine Wickham.
Five years later, writing as Sophie Kinsella, she published The Secret Dreamworld of a Shopaholic – also known as Confessions of a Shopaholic.
It introduced readers to Becky Bloomwood, a financial journalist who is a serial shopper and hopeless when it comes to her own finances, often buying new clothes or shoes on her credit card rather than saving her money.
“I thought, wait a minute, shopping has become the national pastime, and nobody has written about it,” Kinsella said of her bestselling series.
The first two novels in the series were adapted for the 2009 film Confessions of a Shopaholic, starring Isla Fisher.
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A film adaptation of Confessions of a Shopaholic starring Isla Fisher was released in 2009
After its huge success, Kinsella went on to write eight further Shopaholic novels and a short story, and another 18 books in total, including one young adult novel and four children’s books.
Kinsella’s other works include Can You Keep A Secret? and The Undomestic Goddess.
Her books were occasionally referred to as “chick lit” – a description she did not fully endorse
“When I hear the term ‘chick lit’, I feel a pinprick of, not annoyance but of slight resignation,” she told the Daily Mail in 2018. “‘Oh, this again…’
“I’ve never had anyone say to my face, ‘Your books are inferior,’ but if people say, ‘Your books are beach reads,’ I say, ‘Yep, that’s fine by me. Read them on the beach!'”
Kinsella’s most recent novella, What Does It Feel Like?, published in October 2024, was a semi-fictional account of her cancer diagnosis, written after she had surgery.
In an introduction to the book, Kinsella said she had “always processed my life through writing”.
“Hiding behind my fictional characters, I have always turned my own life into a narrative. It is my version of therapy, maybe.”
Kinsella is survived by her husband Henry and their five children.
What is a glioblastoma?
Glioblastomas are the deadliest and most aggressive type of brain cancer.
About 3,200 people are diagnosed with a glioblastoma every year in the UK. Of these, just 160 survive for five years or more.
It’s a type of cancer that grows quickly – glioblastomas are likely to spread within the brain and come back even after being removed.
Symptoms vary, but can include headaches caused by a build-up of pressure, personality changes, and memory problems. People may also have trouble speaking or experience extreme tiredness, depression, seizures and sight problems.
Common treatments include chemotherapy and radiotherapy, or if a patient is well enough, a surgeon will try to remove as much cancer as possible during an operation.
