Where to Find It? #OpenBook Blog Hop

April 24, 2023

What are your favorite resources for research?

It all depends. It changes depending upon the book I am writing. Now that I’ve moved, it has changed again.

I’m no professional when it comes to various types of guns. Some guys I used to work with were heavily into hunting, and they would help me with various aspects of weapon use in my stories. (I wouldn’t know the difference between an AK-15, and AK-17, and a fancy paintball gun.) I’d just walk down the hall and talk to them. Since I’ve retired, that resource is gone. But in my last couple of books, guns haven’t been a major part of the story, so it hasn’t been an issue. (Jake Hennessey, my hero, doesn’t carry a gun. Never has.)

My current WIP (work in progress) is set in Pittsburgh around 1985. That’s changed everything as far as resources. I’ve been chasing rabbits to find the information I need. Although I survived the 1980s, I am looking for the details. What were the top songs and the favorite drug of choice? Those were easy. Trying to find a description of the Penguins’ owner’s club in the Civic Arena was another story. I spent hours watching old videos on YouTube and haunting Facebook groups. I finally got what I needed through one of my brothers, who knew someone who’d been there. Shoot, trying to determine the color of the uniforms the Pittsburgh cops wore back then was a challenge, and it wasn’t that long ago. I should have called their public relations department and asked, but I didn’t think about it.

As the story writes itself, I keep discovering more details I want to incorporate, but there’s no single website that offers me everything. I keep bookmarking additional sites so I can find them again. Remind me – I’ve got to check out the resources of the Pittsburgh Public Library system and see what they offer on-line.

The internet is a wonderful starting point for research, but there’s so much more. I’ve always believed that people are our greatest source of information, if you can find the right ones to talk to.

How about out other authors? What are their favorite resources? Find out by following the links.

As always, until next time, please stay safe.

 

April 24, 2023

What are your favorite resources for research?

Rules:
1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use #OpenBook when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.

 

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

 


Research #OpenBook BlogHop

July 29, 2019

What kind of research do you do, and how long do you spend researching before beginning a book?

I can’t answer this question as it’s written. The truth is, I’m always researching something. Maybe not for the work in progress, but for ideas that I don’t even know exist yet. I’m a keen observer of life, and possibilities for my writing exist everywhere.

Part of that research comes from the forums I follow daily. One of those is aimed at mystery and crime writers, and includes ex-cops, a judge, a medical examiner and other experts. The ideas I get from there may or may not find their way into a Harmony Duprie Mystery, but when one does, I know it’s a fairly accurate description of how ‘stuff’ works.

Because I don’t plot out my books step by step ahead of time, I don’t always know what I need to know for a book until I need to know it. Guns appear in all of my books, but I can tell a pistol from a revolver and a shotgun from a rifle and that’s about it. There’s a lot I can find on the internet, but I’m lucky enough to work with a number of people who are very knowledgeable on the subject and are more that willing to help me out. They were the ones to tell me the rifle that appears on the cover of Wolves’ Knight is real and not a fake.

Image by Lorri Lang from Pixabay

Another thing I spend a lot of time with is google maps. Although I set my stories in familiar territory, I end up mixing fictional places with real ones. Maps help me figure out real roads my characters might take and hopefully make the story more believable. Yes, I really checked to see how many left-handed exits there are along the interstate in Pittsburgh for The Baron’s Cufflinks.

I know that other authors on this blog hop are more methodical in their writing, so I’m looking forward to hearing about their research. Follow the links below to find out how they do it. 

July 29, 2019

What kind of research do you do, and how long do you spend researching before beginning a book?

Rules:1. Link your blog to this hop.
2. Notify your following that you are participating in this blog hop.
3. Promise to visit/leave a comment on all participants’ blogs.
4. Tweet/or share each person’s blog post. Use #OpenBook when tweeting.
5. Put a banner on your blog that you are participating.

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter