Adrian Mole and his mother

The Secret Diaries of Adrian Mole aged 13 ¾ by Sue Townsend

published 1982

The Growing Pains of Adrian Mole by Sue Townsend

published 1984

 

 


 

A while back I invited readers to suggest books for photos from my files, and my recent post on A Shilling for Candles was one result. And now here’s another one! (And this post does not rule out the idea of the photos being used again…)

Daniel Milford Cottam is a long-time blogfriend, as well as an expert on fashion (my ideal reader?) – you can find some of his earlier contributions here.

I have taken his solid gold comments, and my replies, and Adrian’s diary entries, and turned them into a three-way conversation – a first on the blog. I’m like an AI chatbot.

 

Daniel: That picture with the two horizontally recumbent lingerie models reminds me of Pandora Braithwaite borrowing her mother's Janet Reger slip and allowing Adrian to touch the lace on the hem [in the second book, The Growing Pains].




Adrian: ‘I allowed Pandora to visit me in my darkened bedroom. We had a brilliant kissing session. Pandora was wearing her mother’s Janet Reger full-length silk slip under her dress and she allowed me to touch the lace on the hem. I was more interested in the lace near the shoulder straps but Pandora said, ‘No darling, we must wait until we’ve got our ‘‘O” levels.’

I pointed out to Pandora that all this sexual frustration is playing havoc with my skin. But she said, ‘If you really love me you will wait.’

I said if you really love me you wouldn’t wait.

She went then: she had to replace the Janet Reger slip before her mother got back from work.’

 

Daniel: Actually there's another bit in Adrian Mole where Grandma Mole has him spray Ralgex on her shoulder and reveals a corset like a parachute harness, and says that since they went out of fashion the country has lost its backbone.

Moira:  Chance to use up another picture!



Daniel: I'm remembering more and more underwear-related stuff now, like how Pandora's gang put punk studs on their underskirts after the headmaster banned studs from being worn in school "except on the soles of football boots" and that then led me to the Red Socks situation (not really underwear, but Pandora's were lurex and then they had to wear them under their regulation black socks).

Adrian: After school Pandora and some of her gang rushed out to buy studs to put on the hem of their underskirts.

Moira: studded underskirts don’t seem to exist, but sound like a splendid fashion idea. But – I don’t think any modern girl in secondary school ever wears an underskirt under her uniform. I wonder what date they disappeared?

Daniel: And now I've just remembered Pauline Mole hiding her padded bras so that her husband doesn't find out (although I think that's Adrian misunderstanding the situation, cos it seems unlikely that his father wouldn't notice something like his wife's boobs suddenly reducing in size sans bra.

Moira: Yes, I think it was more about discretion (not always Pauline’s watchword…) – the men of a household were not supposed to see various secret feminine things.

Daniel: Growing up is realising that Adrian Mole isn't actually the hero of the early books, and that their real heroine is Pauline, his mum.

Moira: I totally agree about Pauline Mole! I said on the blog 'Pauline Mole, Adrian’s mother, is a heroine for the ages, Cleopatra with a cigarette hanging out of her mouth and a drink in her hand, seen always, of course, through Adrian’s eyes, but still shining on as a beacon of unmaternal liveliness... When Adrian Mole started out in 1982, she seemed like our mothers. Now she is like us.'
Mother Courage!

My favourite line in the books is possibIy this:

Adrian: I asked her about my Family Allowance today, she laughed and said she used it for buying gin and cigarettes. If the Social Services hear about it she will get done!

[Though am also very partial to:]

My mother has decided that sugar is the cause of all the evil in the world, and has banned it from the house. She smoked two cigarettes while she informed me of her decision.

Moira: I have frequently said that if the world ended you could re-create the UK of the 1980s and 1990s using the diaries of Adrian Mole and Bridget Jones.

Re-reading the books, we find Margaret Thatcher, Roger Scruton, the Royal Wedding, the Falklands War. Anyone who was at home during the day watching Play School and choosing a favourite presenter. Pauline has a Buf Puf, which I was surprised to see still exists. It also takes me back to 1982, when the first book was my Christmas present to absolutely everyone (including someone who said it saved her Xmas, because she wasn't where she wanted to be, but just sat and read Adrian Mole all day).

When the electricity is cut off, Adrian tells us this:

After supper of cream crackers and tuna fish, played cards in the candlelight. It was dead good. My father cut the ends off our gloves, we looked like two criminals on the run.

He was a voice for the ages, not perfect, but  funny, and kind, and hard-working and real. And the best unreliable narrator ever. Treacle-haired Pandora was always a long-term lost cause, but should have been grateful to have him.

Just his luck….

This entry on Sue Townsend has links to other appearances.

Comments

  1. Sheer brilliance! The Queen and I is also very funny. There is a good heartedness running through it all. Chrissie

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    1. Yes exactly: good-heartedness.
      I did a list of Royal books for the i newspaper when the Queen died, and I did include The Queen and I.

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  2. Lurex socks beneath regulation school socks reminds me that we used to wear stockings under our school socks, in the belief that no-one would notice… But holes and ladders usually gave us away,

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    1. Christine Harding3 November 2025 at 12:08

      Done it again,

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    2. That's charming. We were busy rolling our skirts over a belt to make them shorter, which would reveal more of possibly illicit legwear.

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    3. Christine Harding3 November 2025 at 18:20

      We did that as well! Must have looked a right sight!

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    4. I remember the girls at school would wear shorts under their skirts, sometimes very brightly patterned, which kept both their hands free to beat the snot and other things out of any boy who tried to show the world their knickers

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    5. I remember much discussion online when the Harry Potter books first came out - many US readers unfamiliar with school uniforms and assuming that they turned all British schoolchildren into Stepford-Wives-style clones. We British commenters did our best to explain about the many, many ways in which one can make a school uniform one's own.

      Sovay

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    6. Christine: When I visualize it now, I think we mut have looked as though we were smuggling something - the words 'spare tyre' come to mind, in a different way from the normal usage.
      Daniel: now that is interesting and unfamiliar to me. However - when we lived in the US, with no uniform, and no PE kit in elementary school, the girls were told to wear cycling shorts underneath if they wanted to wear a skirt or dress when climbing or doing PE. This seemed like a brilliant simple idea to me, and one I strongly recommend (for children and adults)
      Sovay: indeed, there was a fascinating stream of discussion. Which things were actually normal and which were magic? I liked the lady who said to me 'well you won't believe this, but I've never known anyone called Hermione', as if our English school would be full of them.

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  3. This is brilliant, Moira! Beautifully done! And thanks to Daniel, too. Hmm....studded underskirts... never had one but what an idea! I think there are probably a lot of fashion things like that that people have tried to get away with...

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    1. She is so accurate and real about the way schoolchildren think, and the things they do. It was a joy to read the books again.

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  4. I loved Adrian Mole in the 80s, haven't read him for decades - so I've just ordered a compendium of books 1-3.

    I probably shouldn't admit it but there are moments when I agree with Grandma Mole , though I wouldn't be prepared to wear her corset (I suspect the one in the picture is actually a visual understatement and she would actually be encased in beige nylon from shoulder to knee, as described by Susanna Tayler in the comments to the "Anatomy of a Murder" post).

    Sovay

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    1. I suppose that the staunchness of Grandma's generation, of stiff-upper-lip and "intestinal fortitude," has been lacking in the world for a while. Wonder how Bridget Jones would have held up in the Blitz--she might have been downright heroic, but that's not my impression of her, despite her "pluck" and essential goodness. I'd be glad to hear arguments to the contrary, though!

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    2. Sovay: I am sure you will enjoy your books! I found my versions scattered round the house - on my own shelves and also in my children's long-vacated rooms.
      Haven't people always thought the previous generation was tougher and braver? I'm going to argue for different...
      Marty: I think when the Blitz came there must have been many people who surprised others. I'm sure people thought that eg Nancy Mitford would be a lightweight, but she did her bit, as did so many others.
      My money is on Bridget - she did well in a Thai jail...

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    3. Most of the time (when not in Grumpy Old Cow mode) I do acknowledge that younger generations have their own burdens to bear – I couldn’t be more thankful, for example, that there was no social media when I was a child or teenager. And it’s very hard to know how anyone will react in circumstances of great stress, whatever those may be – living through the Blitz would require one kind of fortitude if one was a worker in London trying to maintain a normal life, another if one was eg a fireman tackling the immediate effects of bombing, another again for members of the squads that had to dig through the rubble for casualties.

      And going back a bit further - something that always astonishes me when reading about conditions in the trenches in WW1 is that ANYONE AT ALL came out the other side still in their right mind …

      Sovay

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    4. Most people do manage to cope with what life throws at them, in all eras I think.

      but I agree with you about WW1, the horrors stick in the mind. And the sadness that so man of them didn't feel able to talk about it.

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    5. I agree that you can't be sure how people will react to danger. But some would surprise me more than others! I would be astonished , for example, if a certain whining world "leader" would set as good an example as your King did during the Blitz....

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    6. I have a whole theory about leaders and how they react to danger and disaster - but this isn't the place for it. Perhaps I can bring it into a blogpost at some point.

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  5. In a way I always feel like it's rather a shame that Sue Townsend followed Adrian through his life up until she died, as what was weirdly endearing and funny in the kid becomes less so in the adult, although the books did still have their moments! It's a bit of a monkey's paw in that sense, and I'm not sure I could have had the stomach to face what he wrote about the last 10-15 years.

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    1. Thank you Daniel for your input, while you're here! Much appreciated and has made an interesting and popular post.
      I know what you mean about the way they continued, after a longish gap. I did like the later books, but you had to look at them differently. My brother gave me one and said 'it is still funny, but it is sad and touching at the same time.' My son read one and started worrying about mortgages and debt (he was about 9 or 10). The hope and optimism of growing up was gone...

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    2. Very true. In a way, it's like the meme about "Don't grow up, it's a trap!" but yes, you definitely miss the hope and optimism. It's kind of like how Russian novels end with a detailed descriptions of how their hero ends up, old and decrepit and fading away (or maybe that was just the one I read a very long time ago), and I'm not particularly fond of that level of brutal realism in most cases. (like that TV adaptation of Room With A View that decided to make sure we knew who died in the war, or the Mapp & Lucia spinoff "Au Reservoir" which decided that it had the authority to kill off ALL their popular and beloved characters who were beloved for their unchanging constancy. Not that it wasn't well written, but as a reader, I subscribe to the last lines of Larkin's Young Lady's Photograph Album. I want characters I've grown to love and care for to remain "invariably lovely there/smaller and clearer as the years go by" in their pages.

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    3. Yes, sometimes it is just best not to know, and in the case of fictional characters you can pretend the future isn't out there, so let's make the most of that.

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    4. Have you read "Villette" by Charlotte Bronte? I struggled through that one and felt cheated by the ending.

      SORT OF A SPOILER: Bronte hinted at an unhappy ending but said she didn't want to spoil the reader's hopes for a happy one! Of course I assumed the worst, but wondered why the ambiguity? (Not sure I care about spoiling it, I thought it was kind of low-down of Bronte. The book is said to be her masterpiece, better than that other well-loved book, so people probably don't read it for the ending.)

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    5. A friend's response to "the hope and optimism of growing up" is to tell laughing small children "Enjoy it while you can. It's downhill all the way now."
      If they're screaming he tells them confidentially "It's even worse when you grow up."

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    6. Marty: yes I have. The story goes that she wrote it with a very clear outcome, but her father asked her to make it vaguer, and she agreed. It is not a huge favourite of mine, but the ending actually doesn't bother me. My problem is cringing at the Mary-Sue-ness of it - 'oh look the teacher man can see the wonderfulness in the humble little teacher'.

      James Henry: ... ah, but the children won't listen anyway. Or think it applies to others, not them. Probably just as well.
      I think it was Meryl Streep who told a group of graduating young people: 'you think life is going to be like college/university. It's not. It's going to be like High School.' Brits have watched enough American films/TV to know what she means.

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    7. I was supposed to read Villette for my Uni degree but I gave up on it cos I was so bored and after 5 solid years of nonstop Jane Blooming Eyre (GCSE, A Levels...) I was absolutely Charlotte'd to death.

      Having said that, Five Children on the Western Front is an exception to the rule because I thought that was so incredibly well structured and told and everything made perfect narrative sense.

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    8. I read a couple of crime books by the author of Five Children, so I have put this book straight on my list - what a brave and interesting idea.

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    9. There are a few series where I wished the author had stopped a bit sooner, usually because the final book is a bit sad or disappointing. For example, the final Cazalets book, which I think was written quite a bit later than the others, or the final Flambards novel. The First Four Years by Laura ingalls Wilder is also a bit depressing, though I think she didn't edit it for publication in the same way as the others, so that might be part of the difference in tone.

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    10. I think many writers of fiction these days (both novels and drama) are uncomfortable with providing a "happy ending" - don't know whether they see it as not realistic, not serious enough? I recall a few years ago watching a TV drama series full of trauma, but at the end the protagonists, though not unscathed, had survived and could be optimistic about the future. And then in the last minute or two the writer pulled that rug from under them ... I just thought No, leave them alone, they've suffered enough ...

      I like to pretend the last episode of Detectorists doesn't exist as well.

      Sovay

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    11. I re-read Wolf Hall and Bring up the Bodies fairly regularly, but I no longer will go on to the Mirror and the Light. I am glad she wrote it, it is a masterpiece, but I can't face reading about Cromwell's slow decline. That said, I checked and I have read it four times! but I think, no more.
      As with many things - Antonia Forest is helpful. Nicola wants 'to re-read the whole of Hornblower' to celebrate. But then words to the effect of 'well perhaps not all of it, she doesn't like the end so she'd stop before then.' Honestly, I always feel that gave me permission to do the same: I am such a completist normally, but these days I think of Nicola and stop...

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    12. Sovay - yes I agree. And, Julian Fellowes (not exactly noir-ish usually) should never have ended the Xmas Downton special with the death of a major character. Terrible.
      Now I'll have to rewatch that Detectorists epi to see why you don't like it... do tell me

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    13. My problem with Detectorists was that I liked the way series 3 had ended for the characters - not perfect, but with some long-standing conflicts resolved, harmony and optimism - which then all had to be disrupted to produce further drama, and for me it wasn't worth it. So as far as I'm concerned they all live happily ever after S3/E6.

      Sovay

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    14. Fair enough! I enjoyed it as a much-later catchup, but I can see not everyone would.

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  6. Throughout my late teens and early twenties (mid-late 70s) I was desperate for Janet Reger lingerie. It looked so glamorous, sophisticated and sensuous to wear. But alas, it was just too expensive.

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    1. Me too, it was completely out of reach, not even something you could aspire to or save up for. I remember being astonished by the news that a friend had some items...

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  7. The sugar thing reminds me of John Yudkin's book Pure, White and Deadly, which at one time was quite popular; I remember a yoga teacher mentioning it. The van Tullekens would probably agree.
    What a fun post!

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    1. Thank you! (on behalf of Daniel too. And of course on behalf of Adrian).
      I remember that book - yes it was quite the thing back in the day - I just checked and it was first published in 1972. I always thought it was a brilliant title - memorable and commanding.

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  8. Around 1990 at my secondary school, we were told we needed to wear underskirts in summer, because the summer skirts were very flared sky blue cotton. It seemed old-fashioned even then, and those skirts were phased out within a year or so (which meant wool kilts all year round, but hey ho).

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    1. Interesting, thanks - I wouldn't have expected underskirts so late. The general weirdness of school uniform regulations...

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