To catch you up, #ICYMI, Lee’s protagonist, Solène Marchand, is an art dealer on the cusp of forty when she meets Hayes Campbell, the charismatic British front man for the biggest boy band in the world August Moon. Despite the twenty-year age gap, they cannot deny the sizzling chemistry, irresistible attraction and undeniable camaraderie between them almost from the beginning. What follows is a global love affair, literally each chapter set in glamorous cities like New York, Hong Kong, Paris, and Miami, that has captured the imagination of so many romance readers and refuses to let go.
Many of the parallels Lee found between her real life and the fictional world she created uniquely qualified her to tell this story. She was close to Solène’s age and used to manage a music group, which put her in contact with New Kids on the Block at the height of their fame. This gave her a front row seat to witness a boy band negotiating enormous worldwide popularity and the grittier side of that level of fame. She’d also traveled extensively, lived all over and had many diverse experiences. The child of Jamaican immigrants, Lee grew up in New York City, and lived in Manahttan for years. Studying abroad at 20 years old, she found herself at the epicenter of high fashion, interning in Elle’s French office, living in Paris and attending Chanel shows between classes.
“I was exposed to all of these experiences when I was very young,” Lee says. “And while I was living it, wrote pages and pages of what that world was like. The smells, sights, textures.”
Lee says those detailed journals laid the foundation for the culturally rich palette that would become the fictional universe of Solène, whose parents are French.
Maybe what most effectively prepared Lee to write this story was her experience as an actress in Hollywood for the last 20 years. You may recognize her as Ros Bailey from the Fifty Shades trilogy, but she has also shared the screen with such big names as Will Smith, Gabrielle Union and many more Hollywood heavy hitters. Maturing in Hollywood has intimately acquainted her with the ageism and sexism inevitably explored in an age-gap story featuring an older woman.
“I think of this book as my mid-life crisis,” Lee says. “I was turning 40 and getting older and feeling like I was running out of time, losing my desirability. My ‘fuckability’. It’s a horrible feeling.”
And one not consigned to Hollywood.
“At forty, we as women are coming into our power and confidence in who we are, but it’s around the same time culture tells us we should become invisible,” Lee says. “The media, culture tells us you’re not so pretty. You’re not so great. It really, really hurts.”
The book deftly explores the double standards culture enables. Older men dating much younger women are virile and lucky. In contrast, older women dating younger men are often portrayed as desperate, pathetic, grasping. Lee said she was careful to never call Solène a cougar because of the negative connotation it carries.
Lee also explores how gender roles, whether culturally-assigned or self-assigned, often disadvantage women. Like Solène, Lee navigates parenting on the West side of L.A. surrounded by wealth, privilege and fame. Solène repeatedly makes decisions for her daughter that her ex-husband Daniel is not forced to make. She has to find “balance” that he isn’t asked to find, a reflection of how often even men with families don’t ask for permission to pursue their ambitions. They just do it, but women are often expected to choose our children, our homes in ways that may slow our ambitions or stunt our success. As women who find themselves in this position read The Idea of You, Lee wants them to extrapolate principles encouraging them in their real lives.
“I want women to know they’re not alone,” Lee says. “It would be nice to not have to be in that positon or to make those choices, but esteeming our kids’ needs is part of our fiber. You don’t want to see them suffer. You feel the need to protect them at a chemical level. It’s a bond we don’t escape.”
At the same time, Lee believes we shouldn’t have to reconcile our ambitions with those instincts and responsibilities at the cost of our dreams.
“I want there to be a way for us to pursue what we want to do,” Lee says. “Our dreams, hobbies, goals. Doing those things makes you a better person, a better parent and less resentful.”
That so many women who read The Idea of You walk away from Solène’s story feeling that way, asking those questions, and challenged to reexamine what aging means and looks like, is a testament of Lee’s insightful storytelling. Her experience as an actress and a writer intersect beautifully in this project.
“Film was always something that could touch me in my soul,” Lee says. “As an actress, I know how those performances can reach me and touch me and make me feel. I want other people to feel that way. I feel that way about great books. I’ve always wanted to touch people in the way great storytelling can, whether it’s through film or books.”