Jennifer Crusie's Blog, page 3

August 16, 2025

Argh Author: Gin Jones’ “A Delusion of Death: (Helen Binney Mysteries novella)

Our own Gin Jones has a novella out now, “A Delusion of Death,” part of the Helen Binney Mysteries.

In this homage to Rear Window, Helen Binney breaks her wrist, and is unable to use her cane-wielding hand, effectively rendering her wheelchair-bound. With her husband out of town for a few days, she checks herself into the Wharton B&B where she hopes to sleep through the discomfort and increased disability. But in the middle of the first night, still drowsy and under the influence of painkillers, she witnesses a woman injuring her ankle during a scuffle with another guest, and the two of them heading for the hospital.

Helen’s friends think it was a dream or possibly a hallucination due to the pain meds, and she’s initially inclined to agree with them. But what if it had really happened? Where was the couple now? And how can Helen convince anyone to take her seriously when after just one glance at the brand new splint on her wrist, they all assume she’s on mind-altering painkillers?

Helen is determined to get answers, despite having to investigate with one hand tied behind her back, almost literally. If push comes to shove, she can’t even stand solidly on her own two feet. But it’s becoming more and more clear that she did indeed witness something nefarious, but with no way to prove it, and she’s starting to wish it had all been just a DELUSION OF DEATH.

Amazon only (and it’s in Kindle Unlimited)

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Published on August 16, 2025 00:55

August 14, 2025

This is a Good Book Thursday: The Wednesday Edition

I have been reading Colin Watson–mid 20th c. mystery fiction–until I decided to give my brain a break and watch TV, something I rarely do, and thought to try just a single episode of Wednesday. It’s now my favorite TV show.

So what did you read (or watch) this week?

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Published on August 14, 2025 02:19

August 13, 2025

Working Wednesday: Supporting Animals

We’re sloooowly finishing the first book in the new series (still no title) and Bob has said no flamingos and no llamas. So I am creatively stifled. And then he said something else that gave me a wonderful idea.

Zombies.

He’s gonna love it.

What did you work on this week?

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Published on August 13, 2025 02:55

August 10, 2025

Happiness is Redefining Special

The NYT had an essay on happiness procrastination, the idea that people hold off on doing things they know will make them happy because (one reason) “it’s not the right time” or “I’m saving this for a special occasion.” They get a great bottle of wine and save it even though they’d get much pleasure from opening it now. They get a new dress and save it for a special party, and then wait for a special party to happen. (Do you know how many Easter Sunday dresses I wore one time as a child? Because I kept growing.) They’ve got a crave for birthday cake, but they won’t make one because it isn’t anybody’s birthday. (It’s always somebody’s birthday; check on Wikipedia and celebrate whoever was born now.) We’re withholding happiness from ourselves and don’t ever realize we’re doing it because we want the thing that makes us happy to happen at a special time.

If you think about it, that’s nuts.

What’s the solution? Just knowing that we’re doing it may highlight how crazy it is to conserve happiness. (AKA, this blog post.) Happiness isn’t like money, you don’t have to budget it. Look around at the things you’re not indulging yourself in because it’s not the right time and decide it is the right time. If you’re waiting for a special day, decide that this day is special because the sun came up, because the woods down the road did not catch fire, because you cleaned the bathroom, you special person, and then open that wine, put on that dress, go out to dinner, whatever is it that you’ve been putting off, stop punishing yourself and give yourself the happiness you deserve.

Me, I’m going to make brownies (sugar free) that I’ve been promising myself for weeks and eat them with vanilla ice cream (no sugar added) because this week wqs special: I survived it, and survivors get brownies.

How were you happy this week? And as long as we’re on the subject, what have you been happiness budgeting on and how are you going to rush headfirst into delight this week instead?

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Published on August 10, 2025 02:04

August 7, 2025

This is a Good Book Thursday, the Heyer Edition

Krissie and I were talking about rereading books and she mentioned Heyer, and we listed our favorites, and that got me off mysteries and onto Heyer romances again. The Grand Sophy (of course), Venetia, and The Quiet Gentleman, so far, chosen pretty much at random, but so many other favorites to go, while I press on to finish The Book That Still Doesn’t Have a Title. Argh.

What did you read this week?

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Published on August 07, 2025 01:42

August 6, 2025

Working Wednesday: I Have the Master!

Bob was called out of town until Friday, so I have the master of the current book until Saturday! I am feeling very powerful, especially since Bob added to it and it’s now at 82,000 words. I was afraid it was going to be short, but that’s about 18,000 words for a final act, and that we can do. Very happy about work this week!

What did you work on?

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Published on August 06, 2025 01:39

July 31, 2025

This is a Good Book Thursday, the Allingham Edition

Having read my way through Gilbert, this week I’m glomming Margery Allingham. Bob wants to finish the first book in the series (we really need to get titles for these) by Sunday, so I’m escaping into pre-war England in the hours when I’m not YECing up a museum murder mystery. My head is about to explode.

What did you read this week?

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Published on July 31, 2025 02:28

July 27, 2025

Happiness is Eggs at Midnight

You know how sometimes you just want something simple late at night? Like eggs. Scrambled, sunny-side, over easy, doesn’t matter, they’re all fast easy protein that you can knock off in minutes while staring out the window at the stars. There’s something about that that seems both healthy and sort of illicit. That’s what made me happy last night.

What made you happy this week?

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Published on July 27, 2025 02:12

July 24, 2025

This is a Good Book Thursday: Poetry and Decency Edition

I’m still working my way through my Michael Gilbert mysteries (Smallbone Deceased, The Body of a Girl, The End House, anything with Calder and Behrens or Patrick Petrella). I think the thing that’s drawing me to him right now is that he was such a decent man and that pervades his stories. Some of his mysteries are violent with horrible people in them, but his spies and detectives are all such good, hardworking people, there’s such a core of basic moral decency, not judgment or priggishness, just a firm conviction of how good people behave, how good people treat each other, not because of money or fame or power, but because the foundation of human life is that we’re decent to each other. It’s a very Second Coming time right now, with the worst full of passionate intensity, so to have Gilbert telling story after story about every day people doing every day good is an incredible comfort.

Also a comfort: A book on reading poetry turned up on BookBub this week, and it led me into two other books on looking at words and feeling them, and that was absolutely lovely.

What did you read this week?

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Published on July 24, 2025 01:56

July 23, 2025

Working Wednesday: Thinking About Series

Bob and I are doing our third three-book series, and I’m starting to finally relax into that process. They’re all hard, but the first one is hardest, not just because we’re setting everything up while telling a story, but because there’s so much I don’t know, and I panic. But the thing is, we won’t know what these books are about until we finish the first draft of the last one. We can’t know, one of the major reasons for writing stories is find out what’s been lurking beneath our frontal lobes. (Increased degree of difficulty: Two very different frontal lobes.) I scream, “It’s not there yet!” and Bob says, “Chill and keep writing,” and he’s right. This is a marathon, not a sprint. Enjoy the journey, Jenny.

What did you work on this week?

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Published on July 23, 2025 02:07