Wednesday, May 6, 2026

Yes, It's Cerulean



HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Well, happily, there is no escaping the new The Devil Wears Prada–and who would want to escape? I pretty much adored every minute of the original–well, except for some parts, like why would Andy have THAT boyfriend? but whatever.  I especially applauded any moment that Meryl Steep was on screen ("No no. That's all...."and "Why is no one rea-dy...."), and yes, especially the “cerulean” scene. And--the best--when Andy came out in the Chanel boots. Oh, so perfect.

Remember? She was transformed. Clothes can do that, right? And the wonderful Lucy Ashe (look at her bio! Swooning!) reminds us how clothing can be just as powerful in novels.

Keep reading, because she has a terrific question for us all at the end. And one lucky commenter will win a copy of her new book!




Dressing characters: 
        fashion and the meaning behind our clothes
by Lucy Ashe


It fascinates me how some writers describe the clothes their characters wear in intricate depth while others offer broad strokes or nothing at all. For me, I’ve always been interested in the sometimes deliberate but often unconscious choices that we make when dressing ourselves.


 The couple who leave the house wearing near-identical outfits, the woman with a wardrobe packed with her ‘uniform’ of white t-shirts and jeans, the school-teacher who wears a comedy tie every day. Even when we don’t realise it, clothes are performative: they show the world something of who we want to be, or they hide us, defending us from the scrutiny of others.


When I was writing The Model Patient, I became obsessed with the choices my characters made in dressing themselves. The Model Patient is about a former fashion-model turned housewife in 1960s London, and the clothes she wears are a protective armour from the parts of her life that frighten her. A new shirt gives her confidence, torn tights and a miniskirt is a rebellion against the disapproval of her mother-in-law, a leather jacket makes her feel strong.






Carnaby Street, London, 1966

When Evelyn Westbrook develops a dangerous relationship with her psychotherapist, it is not only her own clothes that she obsesses over, but also those of her therapist. He takes a Freudian ‘blank-slate’ approach, giving her nothing of himself and withholding his care when she needs it most, a technique that intensifies the transference (the way the patient projects past relationships onto the therapist). All she knows about him is what she can see, and she analyses his clothes with fixated vigilance.

At first she likes the softness of his clothes, no ties, no stiffly ironed shirts, instead a casual wardrobe for a 1960s Mod man: she feels that his fashion choices seem to give her permission to relax, to feel she is with someone who will listen to her with care rather than assert his authority as the doctor. But soon this begins to shift and she becomes convinced that he is making deliberate clothing choices to manipulate her, using the secrets she shares with him to wear clothes that bring up intense emotions.






Fashion advertisements in women’s magazines from the 1960s.



And although the idea of choosing clothes as a means to control and manipulate others might seem far-fetched, there is a gentler truth. We do signal something about ourselves through the clothes we wear, the brands we choose, the styles we adopt. Are we a rule-follower or breaker? What group affiliations do we have? Are we in a position of power, setting the standard and expecting others to follow? Or do we want to hide our body, to fit in, to be invisible? Or do we simply want to be comfortable, to tell anyone who sees us that today is for reading a book on the sofa, our chunky knit cardigan and thick woollen socks a sign that we do not to be disturbed.





My summer ‘uniform’ in NYC - I have worn this dress and these sneakers hundreds of times.


And a writer, too, can show much about a character through their clothes. In Orlando, Virginia Woolf uses clothing to hide and signal gender identity; in Olive Kitteridge, the gauzy green muslin dress that Olive’s daughter-in-law mocks reveals much about Olive’s personality; and Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple hides her sharp mind behind her unassuming tweed coats, plain skirts and handbags.








Do you have an outfit that makes you feel different in some way? Or a favorite item of clothing that makes you feel most like yourself?

And what about in novels - is there a book in which the way a character dresses has stayed with you well after closing the book?

HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Oh, yes, of course! I just got some new jeans (yes!) that actually look great. And I certainly have a hierarchy of book event outfits--I can tell you exactly what I will wear for an A-list author. 

And I am very carful about what my characters wear. I hardly ever describe them point by point, but the psychological image comes through, and every time I do it, it has a purpose.

And of course we know Grace Kelly's dress in Rear Window, and Audrey Hepburn's gown in Sabrina, and in Breakfast at Tiffany's, and how about the Ascot scene in My Fair Lady? And the dress Eliza  Dolittle wears to the ball?

In books? I can completely envision Maisie Dobbs. And Rhys's Georgie. Oh, and even Kinsey Millhone, with her little black dress. 

How about you, Reds and Readers? 




Lucy Ashe
trained at the Royal Ballet School before changing course to study English Literature at Oxford University, where she graduated in 2010. She later qualified as an English and Drama teacher. Her first two novels, The Dance of the Dolls and The Sleeping Beauties, were inspired by her years immersed in the world of classical dance. The Model Patient marks a powerful evolution in her work, drawing on her personal experience as a therapy patient to explore the psychology of power, trust, and self-erasure. A former resident of London, Ashe lives in Brooklyn, New York.
Learn more at lucyashe.com.




The Model Patient: A Therapy Relationship Spiraling Towards Disaster
It’s London in the early 1960s. As fashion, art and youth culture converge, the city is transforming from postwar conservatism to the cultural upheaval of the Swinging Sixties. Even as sexual politics begin to shift, women’s lives remain tightly constrained.

Evelyn Westbrook, a young model navigating a glamorous but precarious career, enters psychoanalysis seeking clarity and control over her increasingly fraught marriage and her husband’s insistence on starting a family. Newly available, the contraceptive pill offers the tantalizing promise of bodily autonomy, along with fear, stigma, and secrecy. 

As Evelyn’s sessions with her therapist deepen, the boundaries of their relationship begin to erode. Slowly, she loses trust in her own perceptions, unsure whether her growing 
unease is a symptom of her supposed pathology – or evidence that something is deeply wrong. 

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

To Binge, or not to BInge?


HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Remember when you would turn on the TV by pulling out a little switch? And then the arrival of the remote control, very fun. But another thing that has evolved is...bingeing.



Remember Must See TV  on Thursdays? It was Friends, and then something else I forget, and then yyou were supposed to watch ER. (Although I'm not sure I have ever seen ER.) And if you didn’t watch it on Thursdays, you would not be able to see it until the reruns.


(Which, remember, they called New to You? Which I always thought was genius.)


But then, and I looked up the timing, starting in 2013 with a certain television show (more on that in a minute), you could watch all of the episodes of a show in one sitting if you wanted. They began to call it bingeing, where a production company or cable platform would put out an entire season of a show, and you could watch however many you wanted in a row.


Other shows remained as once a week, or specials.  You could never binge Survivor, back then, or most things on broadcast TV.



I remember the delight I felt in bingeing — like somehow I was getting a secret advantage, and I could just wallow in The Wire and Outlander, and watch however many I wanted.  Still, I tried to pace myself, because I knew when it was over, it was over. 


Soon, everyone binged. We all talked about it, how we had discovered a new show, and we were there for the duration.


And then I think, and just my assessment, production companies realized that we were all burning through their shows faster than they could provide them.


And the pendulum swung back to once a week. Downton Abbey was only once a week, wasn’t it? And now the Laura Dave movie, and Paradise, and the Jon Hamm show,  many more are still just once a week.


How about you Reds and Readers? Do you binge? Did you used to and not anymore? How do you feel about waiting a week for your next episode? Do you ever save them up so you can watch more than one at a time?



And oh, according to Google :-): the first bingeable show, back in 2013, was House of Cards.  (About the demise of which I will not comment.)


DEBORAH CROMBIE: I don’t mind the once a week format so much. I kind of like having those markers in the week to look forward to. I can remember when our life centered around the Sunday night episode of the X-Files–and mine around Masterpiece Theater! Now, for things on broadcast TV that are once a week, we either record them, or watch the next day on Hulu.

Rick, on the other hand, despises the once a week drop, and will wait until a season of something is finished so he can binge it. 


JENN McKINLAY: Weirdly, I’ve never binged a show. I think I’ve been on deadline since 2008 so I never had time. I will indulge in 2 episodes back to back but that’s it. On the flip side, I want to watch an episode every evening until I’ve finished the series so I generally won’t start a show unless all the episodes have dropped. 


HALLIE EPHRON: I don’t think I’ve ever binged a show, either. But then I eat my fruit cocktail pears (least favorite) first and cherries last. Somehow I think that’s related.

Also, I don’t like to engage with the TV for that long in one sitting. And some shows (Great British Baking) need to be savored in one-episode pieces. I do love being able to record a show and watch it at my convenience.


LUCY BURDETTE: We don’t binge either, though we will watch a show one episode a night until it’s finished, if time permits. Right now we’re watching the most recent season of THE LINCOLN LAWYER that way. I don’t like when TV interferes with my reading though!


Love the fruit cocktail analogy Hallie!


RHYS BOWEN:  I very rarely binge. When the Crown came on Netflix I did watch several episodes in a row, but on the whole I like the suspense and anticipation of waiting a week for the next episode, especially with good mysteries like Magpie Murders. The waiting made it all the sweeter.  And Hallie, I enjoy waiting, week by week, for the Great British Baking Show. 


I’m really looking forward the the Other Bennet Sister that is coming to Britbox this week. I’ve seen several clips and for a big fan of P and P I might be tempted to binge.



JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: The only show I can remember truly bingeing was the first season of THE WALKING DEAD. My daughter Victoria and I decided to “give the first episode a try” around 8PM one Friday. We finally turned off the TV at 3AM! 


I don’t have that kind of stamina anymore. To me, bingeing means, as Jenn says, watching one or two episodes every night until the show is done. That’s my pattern with my beloved Kdramas. I also enjoy the swing back to weekly  - what do we call it? Drops? It’s not broadcasting. Anticipating the weekly episode of ONLY MURDERS IN THE BUILDING was half the fun.


HANK: Yes, I agree, Julia, and it also allows people to chat about it without fear of spoilers! And that's what we often do, too, is watch one episode at a time once they are all available.


How about you, Reds and Readers? Do you binge watch? Or do you love looking forward to once-a-week watching? Or--do you hoard and then savor?


I know some of you don't watch TV at all. So for you, when you find a series from a new author, do you gobble them all? Or is waiting the fun part?


Monday, May 4, 2026

In Memoriam: John Quin-Harkin

It is with profound sorrow, the utmost respect, infinite admiration, and the deepest love that we honor and mourn the passing of the wonderful, dapper, brilliant, clever, ingenious, witty, enthusiastic, and unique John Quin-Harkin, beloved husband of our darling Rhys Bowen.

He left this life peacefully, wrapped in affection,  and surrounded by those who love him.  

There is a change in the universe now, but he lives on in our love and memories. 

And our hearts are broken for his dear family--he was part of our family, too.