Showing posts with label headlines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label headlines. Show all posts

Friday, March 28, 2014

Face Time with Folks Who Make Headlines

By Linda Lovely

This month’s theme is “From the Headlines.” Since I write romantic suspense and mysteries, news headlines can be a great inspiration for plot twists and characters. However, my idea bank really overflows when I have an opportunity to spend time with folks who are actively involved in various aspects of law enforcement.

In September, 2012 and 2013, I had the opportunity to sit in on presentations by FBI and DEA agents, a sheriff, a prosecutor, a DNA expert, an undercover cop, a forensic psychologist, members of a bomb squad and an underwater dive team, K-9 officers, a detective assigned to gang work, a medical examiner, the head of a SWAT team, a specialist in bioterrorism, and, believe it or not, I haven’t exhausted the list of pros I met. And, I didn’t just sit in on lectures. I fired a Glock in firearms training, having to make instant decisions on when and who to shoot in various scenarios. I carried an assault weapon on a building search, where bad guys were suspected of hiding. I looked for contraband hidden in a jail cell. I tromped through woods to investigate a shallow grave.

Perhaps the biggest bonus, however, is that I got to ask questions of experts in a wide range of professions, questions directly related to ideas for future books and problems with current manuscripts. Even featured speakers couldn’t get enough of the sessions. Lee Child sat next to me in one of the classes conducted by an undercover cop from New York City.

So, how did I get face time with these busy, in-demand individuals? I attended my first Writers’ Police Academy (WPA) in 2012, and I couldn’t wait to return in 2013. This year I’m fortunate to be one of the WPA volunteer staffers helping to run the event, which is held at an actual police academy in Jamestown, N.C.

Lee Lofland, a former police detective, is the bright, funny man behind the WPA, which has earned generous support from Sisters in Crime, another organization I belong to. Lee’s unique program offers authors an unmatched hands-on, interactive educational experience. While it’s sort of like a crime Disneyland for adults, it also provides invaluable insights to anyone who wants to incorporate any aspect of a crime in a manuscript. It certainly has given me a much better understanding and appreciation for all aspects of law enforcement and forensics. Plus, I’m much more likely to get the details right.

I’d urge you to sign up for the 2014 Writers’ Police Academy but it sold out the first day registration opened. But you may want to add the website to your favorites and start looking in January for when registration will open for the 2015 academy. You won’t be sorry.

Here’s the website: http://www.writerspoliceacademy.com/. Oh, and this year’s featured author guests include Michael Connelly and Lisa Gardner. 

Friday, March 21, 2014

Washed Away in the UK

Hi, I'm Pippa Jay, author of science fiction and the supernatural with a romantic soul. When I first saw the blog topic of Headlines for March, I thought I'd struggle to find something to write about. Not so. While the US has shivered under a polar vortex, the UK has had one of the mildest but also the wettest and most stormy winters that I can remember in my lifetime. While I've been lucky to live in one of the few places relatively untouched by any of it, apart from a garden that resembled a swamp than a lawn and had my chickens wishing for webbed feet if their little face were anything to go by, it still had an affect. The East Anglian coastline took a hammering and coastal defences were overrun. Hardly surprising when this is the kind of battering they took.


 Though we live a half hour drive from the coast, it's one of our favourite places to go with the family, weather permitting. Mersea Island is one of our frequent haunts, and has provided inspiration for several scenes/stories in my work (including a scifi short - The Bones of the Sea). But even here you can see the weather has had an impact.


I count my blessings that a boggy garden has been the worst we suffered, while my heart goes out to those who have lost everything in the flooding, many of whom still can't even return to their homes. And I'm even more grateful that spring appears to have arrived! I've already had a couple of warm sunny days sat out in the garden with my laptop or my lunch while my girls peck their way round the undergrowth. Let's hope there'll be no more storms hitting the headlines...or hitting us!


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