Sunday, November 27, 2011

Jean Henry Mead: MYSTERY WE WRITE Blog tour guest today.





Jean will be giving away one of her mystery ebooks at the end of each of her 14 blog appearances, as well as three print novels at the conclusion of the tour. Be sure to leave a comment and email address to be eligible for the drawings, and visit her blog at http://jeansblogtour.blogspot.com/   and
http://theviewfrommymountaintop.blogspot.com/

Jean Henry Mead is the author of 15 books, half of them novels. She’s also an award-winning photojournalist and children’s author. She previously served as a news, magazine and small press editor, with articles published nationally as well as abroad. Jean's latest Logan & Cafferty mystery/suspense novel, Murder on the Interstate, is available at: Amazon.com: http://tinyurl.com/6znjvsa (print and Kindle) and Barnes and Noble: http://tinyurl.com/3vxzppy (Nook)

Jean is writing today about one of my favorite topics: The research required to write a book, and how we learn from it. 
All That Research!
I love research. In fact, it’s my favorite part of writing. When I was young and foolish, I spent two years at a microfilm machine to research a centennial history. Needless to say, I’ve since done my research online, in person or on the phone. The best part was having a stack of typewritten notes leftover that I used for my first historical novels, with enough notes remaining to write several more.
When I began writing mysteries, I had my own police procedural information at hand because my husband is a former highway patrolman, and I was a police reporter. However, because I had written about so many disturbing and heartbreaking events,  I decided to write about amateur sleuths and a lovesick sheriff. Humor is an integral part of my work and I include it in all my books, both fiction and nonfiction, with a little romance sprinkled in.
I brought my two 60-year-old feisty women sleuths along when we moved from my native California to my husband’s native Wyoming. So Dana and Sarah also sell their homes in the San Joaquin Valley— where a serial killer has murdered their friends in A Village Shattered— and they buy a motorhome. They’re traveling in Colorado in Diary of Murder when Dana Logan gets word that her sister Georgi has taken her own life. Dana knows that would never happen so they drive through a Rocky Mountain blizzard to reach Wyoming.
The research for that scene happened several years earlier when I had to drive our motorhome through an unexpected snowstorm. I couldn’t let the terrifying experience go to waste so I began my second mystery novel with it. Then, in Murder on the Interstate, I used my experience driving the RV along a Northern Arizona highway in a rainstorm while listening to truckers on my CB radio. So, when Dana and Sarah discover a Mercedes convertible with a murdered woman inside, “Big Ruby” McCurdy, a woman trucker, comes to their rescue.
The humorous CB chatter that follows is authentic because I had listened to it for weeks. I later interviewed a woman trucker who hauled produce, so I knew that drivers have to pay for their loads if the lettuce wilts before it gets to market. Later, when Dana and Sarah conduct research to find the killer, I send them to the newspaper morgue and library, and have them interview witnesses, along with Dana’s journalist daughter. My own news reporting came in handy but I also used online sources such as the Wikipedia for information on sulfuric acid spills. I then interviewed a chemical engineer to write about homegrown terrorism. Map Quest refreshed my memory of the Arizona terrain as well as an Indian Reservation south of Scottsdale, where the chemical spills occur.
If I had any doubts about the accuracy of the Wikipedia, I was reassured by bestselling author Lucia St. Clair Robson, a former librarian, who told me that the Wiki is as accurate, if not more, that the Encyclopedia Britannica. I use the online source extensively, but also check the facts in other ways as well.
The only research problem I have is spending too much time reading instead of writing. There are so many fascinating subjects that I have a difficult time putting the research aside to begin spooning it into my novels.

17 comments:

Jean Henry Mead said...

Thanks for hosting me today, Jinx, on day #3 of our virtual tour.

Earl Staggs said...

Jean, your previous life and your own experiences make your books standouts. Of course, you have to toss a lot of hard work into the mix, too, I'm sure.

Jean Henry Mead said...

Thanks, Earl. It's fun writing about characters in a series because they become like old friends. I always wonder what they're going to say and do when I sit down at the computer every morning. :)

Anonymous said...

Another great post, ladies!

M.M. Gornell said...

Oh, Jean, wonderful hearing you do so much research online! It's so much quicker. I love doing research... Interesting about Wikipedia and the Encyclopedia. Fifteen books! WOW!

Madeline

Jean Henry Mead said...

Thanks, Anne. I've enjoyed yours as well.

Jean Henry Mead said...

Madeline, the Internet is a lifesaver for me because I'm so isolated from "civilization." I was happy to hear that the Wikipedia is so accurate with facts because I use it a lot.

Prentiss Garner said...

Research is hard work but it pays off in the end whewn one reads a believable mystery. Good post.

Marja said...

Great post, Jean. In some ways I really enjoy the research, and I'm learning things I never would have known otherwise. And your research does show in your books.

Jean Henry Mead said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Jean Henry Mead said...

Thank you, Prentiss. I enjoy resesarch (most of it) so much that I have a hard time leaving it to write.

Jean Henry Mead said...

Thanks, Marja. I think the more research is carefully sprinkled in, the better disbelief is suspended.

Alice Duncan said...

It's so neat that you love your research, Jean! Great post.

Morgan Mandel said...

Research is my weakness. I can't stand it and put it off as long as possible. You're lucky you like doing it, Jean.

Morgan Mandel
http://morganmandel.blogspot.com

Jean Henry Mead said...

Alice and Morgan, thanks for stopping by. I think research is exciting because I learn so much while doing it, and it keeps the old brain from getting rusty. :)

Sheila Deeth said...

I don't love research, but I love Wikipedia.

Eric said...

I discovered your web site via Google while looking for a related subject, lucky for me your web site came up, its a great website. I have bookmarked it in my Google bookmarks. You really are a phenomenal person with a brilliant mind!
Please Visit ===> Police Officer Training Class