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The Oregon novelist who wrote an essay called "How to Murder Your Husband" will spend life in prison after a Multnomah County judge handed down the sentence in the shooting death of her real-life husband Monday.

A jury found Nancy Crampton Brophy, 71, guilty of second-degree murder last month at the end of a seven-week trial.

Nancy Crampton-Brophy appears in an Oregon courtroom for her murder trial

Nancy Crampton-Brophy appears in an Oregon courtroom for her murder trial. She is accused in the 2018 killing her husband, Daniel Brophy. (KPTV/Pool)

Facing financial struggles in Oregon in 2018, she shot her chef husband Daniel Brophy, 63, in the back at his teaching job at the now-defunct Oregon Culinary Institute with a 9mm handgun, prosecutors alleged.

In her essay, which the judge did not allow to be introduced at trial, she lists five motives for killing a husband. The first is financial – which she explains, "is big."

‘HOW TO MURDER YOUR HUSBAND’ FICTION AUTHOR ON TRIAL FOR REAL-LIFE MURDER IN OREGON

Nancy Crampton-Brophy mugshot

Years before Nancy Crampton Brophy allegedly murdered her husband, she penned an essay titled, "How to Murder Your Husband." (Multnomah County Sheriff's Office)

"As a romantic suspense writer, I spend a lot of time thinking about murder and, consequently, about police procedure," her essay begins. "After all, if the murder is supposed to set me free, I certainly don’t want to spend any time in jail."

After killing her husband, she sought to collect about $1.4 million in life insurance claims, according to FOX 12 Oregon.

‘HOW TO MURDER YOUR HUSBAND’ NOVELIST ACCIDENTALLY CONFESSED TO KILLING REAL-LIFE HUSBAND: PROSECUTOR

On the morning of the murder, June 2, 2018, She appeared on security video entering the culinary school before her husband. She appeared again leaving just before 7:30 a.m., shortly after her husband’s arrival.

Nancy Crampton Brophy in court

Nancy Crampton Brophy appears in an Oregon courtroom for her murder trial. (KPTV/Pool)

A coworker found him dead in a kitchen about a half-hour later, according to court documents.

The killer won’t be eligible for parole until after 25 years behind bars, FOX 12 reported Monday.

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The trial had been delayed after COVID-19 disruptions, court records show.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.