Research
is often very firmly targeted towards obtaining the information that
you know you are going to need. If you’re a crime writer it may be
looking up on line the outward signs of a particular sort of violent
death or asking questions of your local police. If you write
historical novels it can be studying the food or fashions of the time
and visiting museums or historical houses to get a glimpse of
reconstructions of the real thing. All this research has to be
focused around what you need to know or, if you’re like me, there’s
a danger of being side-tracked along wonderful side roads and never
get the actual writing done.
However,
occasionally it’s valuable to allow yourself a day off to do
‘pick-and-mix’ research and go out to meet people who approach
your subject from a very different angle. Sometimes it can be a panel
event, or an exhibition or lecture put on by a museum or gallery and,
something I particularly enjoy, a public information open day run by
an educational establishment. The value of this pick-and mix approach
is that you sometimes find out things you didn’t know you didn’t
know and, even better, you discover things that you didn’t know you
wanted to know.
This
weekend I gave myself a day off from writing, editing or research
specifically focused on things I had to know and went to the
University of Portsmouth’s Forensics Open Day. For a crime writer
it was like being a kid in a sweet shop where you were allowed to
sample all the goodies and friendly shop keepers smiled approvingly
and discussed what flavour you liked best.
I
found out about a wide range of subjects: memory, eye-witness
identification, wildlife crime, the illegal ivory trade and the
antiques market, cyber crime on social media, and what a professional
burglar looks for when targeting a house and what objects are the
ones they go for, crime scene interpretation. Added to which, I
talked to a selection of delightful and fascinating people who were
doing cutting-edge research and appeared happy to share their
knowledge.
All of my books are grounded in the psychology of crime and need a good knowledge of forensics so days like those offered by the University of Portsmouth are invaluable.
I’d
recommend attending something that interests you on a serendipity
basis. For me it was a day of renewal, in which I rediscovered my
delight in finding out about new aspects of psychology and crime. As
an extra bonus, I found the theme and title for my next Scene of
Crimes novel, it’s not due to be written for two or three years but
it’s good to be prepared.
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