The 88-year-old British globally recognized author Jilly Cooper died last week after sustaining head injuries from a fall at her Gloucestershire home on October 5, 2025.
The inquest into her death found the cause to be accidental, resulting from a traumatic subduralhematoma.
Cooper is, by all means, Britain’s most celebrated author, best recognized for her steamy tales of upper-class scandal.
She wrote Rivals in 1988, the second novel in herRutshire Chronicles series, which portrays the scandals and secrets of the upper class.
Cooper was considered a legendary figure in English fiction writing; she went on to amass a multimillion-pound net worth through her profound writing.
Dame Jilly Cooper, whose books have sold over 11 million copies globally, left behind a huge fortune that cements her status as one of Britain’s most accomplished authors of all time.
As per the details published by the Daily Mail, the UK’s most read author has left behind a net worth of £10 million.
Her work penetrated through a new generation of readers when Rivals, one of the novels in the series, was adapted into a Disney+ series, with estimated additional earnings of £2 million.
Outside of her literary laurels, Dame Jilly also amassed wealth through real estate investments.
She bought a 14th-century home in the Cotswolds in the 1980s for just 145,000, which is now estimated to be valued around £3 million.
While writing her debut novel in her 11-book Rutshire Chronicles series, Dame Jilly nearly lost her home to repossession—an event that reversed her financial woes and solidified her status as a top-selling author.
Despite her long-standing fear of running out of money, Dame Jilly Cooper went on to amass a multimillion-pound fortune through her writing.
She was perhaps best known for the Rutshire Chronicles—a series of romantic dramas centered around the charismatic and scandal-prone Rupert Campbell-Black.
Her work reached a new generation of readers when Rivals, one of the novels in the series,was adapted into a Disney+ series, reportedly earning her an additional £2 million.
Riders was published in 1985, and it rocketed to the top of the bestseller charts, launching Dame Jilly’s literary triumph.
By 1994, her money worries were a distant memory: that year she ranked among Britain’s top-earning women, pulling in over 630,000 from royalties and TV rights alone.