Difference between revisions of "Jennifer Crusie"

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* [[Don't Look Down]] - 2006; Co-written with Bob Mayer; [[St. Martin's Press|St. Martin's Press]]
 
* [[Don't Look Down]] - 2006; Co-written with Bob Mayer; [[St. Martin's Press|St. Martin's Press]]
 
* [[Faking It]] - 2004; [[St. Martin's Press|St. Martin's Press]]
 
* [[Faking It]] - 2004; [[St. Martin's Press|St. Martin's Press]]
* Fast Women* ''Getting Rid of Bradley'' - [[Jennifer Crusie]] won the [[1995 RITA® Winners|1995 RITA®]] in the [[Short Contemporary]] category.
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* Fast Women
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* ''Getting Rid of Bradley'' - [[Jennifer Crusie]] won the [[1995 RITA® Winners|1995 RITA®]] in the [[Short Contemporary]] category.
 
* [[Manhunting]] - 1993; [[Mira|Mira]]
 
* [[Manhunting]] - 1993; [[Mira|Mira]]
 
* Strange Bedpersons
 
* Strange Bedpersons

Revision as of 02:07, 5 February 2006

Jennifer Crusie's career as a romance author began when she read over 100 titles as part of a class project. She is known throughout the industry as a generous mentor, while her readers are attracted to her smart, funny style. Crusie began her career as an author for Harlequin. After leaving Harlequin, she moved to St. Martin's Press where she has been wildly successful.

Crusie recently teamed with author Bob Mayer to co-author a series of books.


On the Web

Books

Fiction

Non-Fiction

Story Elements

Like many authors, Jennifer Crusie taps certain elements and themes from story-to-story. She recombines these in new and different ways while continuing to explore her signature themes.

Dogs

Jennifer Crusie novels often feature dogs as characters (clearly she's not a cat person). Her ability to make canines come alive on the page has often lead to readers to refer to Anyone But You as "Fred's book". The depressed half-basset hound, half-beagle steals every scene he's in.

A stray dog also plays a key role in Crusie's breakout classic Welcome To Temptation. Other Crusie books featuring dogs in major roles include Charlie All Night, Crazy For You -- the dog leads to a break-up.

Family

A key aspect of Jennifer Crusie's work is family ties. Her heroines tend to come from slightly eccentric yet strongly bonded families. The concept of family extends to close friendships.

Friends

Crusie's heroines tend to have strong friendships with other women. These friendships are integral to the story.