Popular Culture Review Vol. 19, No. 1, Winter 2008 | Page 44

40 Popular Culture Review 1999); High Gloss Broads (Hochglanzweiber, 2001); and her most recent, The Champagne Diet (Die Champagner-Diat, 2006) have sold millions of copies in the last 15 years,7 and Hera Lind is certainly one of if not the best-known female author in Germany today. Are her novels indeed “mocking, satirical books” (14) or “rebellious novels” (15)8 and therefore worthy of our respect as implied by Jngeborg Mues, founder and editor of the Fischer series, or are they best described as “sparkling wine-prose”9 by critic Allmeier (LI2), “lightweight babbling” by columnist Ohland 27,10 and by Lind herself as “light fare” (MDR Interview)? 11 And if Lind herself never reads “books of the type [she] writes, because that would be wasted time for her,”12 as she confided to Angelika Ohland in an interview with Deutsches Allgemeines Sonntagsblatt (28), why should anybody else? In Germany, at least, anecdotal evidence suggests that the majority of books are bought by women.13 Since wom