
The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous
1997 • Drama
Reeling from the death of his beautiful mother, Lysander Hawkley, semi-pro Tennis ace, moves from one married woman to another, whilst amounting debts he has no hope of paying off. Until his best friend, Ferdie, hits on a plan - Romance the wives, make the husbands jealous, but get the wives to pay for the privilege. Lysander agrees, and does well, until he meets Kitty Rannaldini, the bullied wife of the greatest conductor in the world. As he gets to know her, Lysander realises he feels more for Kitty than he'd like to admit. The town of Paradise will never be the same again!
Why you should read the novel
Before you stream the TV miniseries, dive into the source: The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous by Jilly Cooper. The novel delivers riotous wit, irresistible romance, and razor-sharp social satire set in the lush English countryside, making every chapter a delicious escape.
Cooper’s book offers a far richer experience than the screen, with deeper backstories, sparkling dialogue, and the full, sprawling world of the Rutshire Chronicles. You’ll revel in the high-society scandals, equestrian glamour, and the clever emotional beats that only a Jilly Cooper novel can deliver.
If you loved the TV series, reading the book is the ultimate upgrade. Get The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous in paperback, ebook, or audiobook and enjoy the complete, page-turning story the adaptation can only hint at.
Adaptation differences
The TV adaptation streamlines Jilly Cooper’s exuberant novel into a brisk miniseries, centering heavily on Lysander’s jealousy-making scheme. The book, by contrast, revels in an expansive ensemble, layered motivations, and the broader Rutshire social tapestry.
On screen, tone and content are softened. The miniseries reduces the racier encounters and some of the novel’s naughtiest satire, while the book’s interior monologue, sharp asides, and laugh-out-loud set pieces amplify both humor and heart.
Structurally, the series compresses timelines, merges or omits side characters, and reshuffles events to fit limited runtime. The novel’s interwoven subplots, recurring Rutshire figures, and thematic callbacks get fuller development on the page.
Settings and stakes are likewise streamlined for television. Equestrian and high-society backdrops, professional intrigues, and the ripple effects of Lysander’s work play out more intricately in the book, with some relationships and resolutions simplified or curtailed in the adaptation.
The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous inspired from
The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous
by Jilly Cooper