J.J. Hensley is a former police officer and former Special Agent with the U.S. Secret Service. He's the author of the novels Resolve, Measure Twice, Chalk’s Outline, Bolt Action Remedy, and Record Scratch. He graduated from Penn State University with a B.S. in Administration of Justice and has a M.S. degree in Criminal Justice Administration from Columbia Southern University. Hensley’s first novel, Resolve, was named one of the Best Books of 2013 by Suspense Magazine and was named a Thriller Award finalist for Best First Novel.
Record Scratch (due out this week) is the second installment of the series featuring private eye and former secret service agent Trevor Galloway and centers on a woman who wants to hire Galloway to not only solve her brother’s homicide, but recover a vinyl record she believes could ruin his reputation. He doesn't want or need the case, but when the potential client closes the meeting by putting a gun under her chin and pulling the trigger, his sense of obligation drags him down a path he may not be ready to travel.
As Galloway pieces together the final days of rock and roll legend Jimmy Spartan, he struggles to sort through his own issues which include having the occasional hallucination. He’s not certain how bad his condition has deteriorated, but when Galloway is attacked in broad daylight by men he assumed were figments of his imagination, he realizes the threat is real and his condition is putting him and anyone nearby at risk. The stoic demeanor that earned Galloway the nickname The Tin Man is tested as he reunites with an old flame, becomes entangled in a Secret Service investigation, and does battle with old enemies.
Hensley stops by In Reference to Murder today to take some Author R&R talking about "Research, Records, and Receipts":
I like Vince.
Vince is a nice guy. Vince runs Galaxie Electronics in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh and happens to be an encyclopedia of information about record players, turntables, and vinyl albums. Vince and I spoke at length with the understanding I might use both him and his shop as references in a novel I was planning to write. I did make it clear I couldn’t guarantee the safety of the semi-fictional character nor the store that I ended up naming Planetary Electronics. Vince was more that okay with that arraignment. Poor, sweet, innocent, Vince.
Hopefully, Vince will still speak with me and he’ll understand how incredibly valuable he was to the creation of Record Scratch. Vince is one of many people who have saved me from making horrible errors over the years and allowed me to plug in details readers find interesting. I’m often amazed when writers make basic mistakes that could have been avoided by not only conducting simple online research but by making a few phone calls or going out an interviewing people face-to-face. It’s amazing how many people are excited to help an author get the details right and most aren’t even offended, and sometimes may be flattered, if some thinly-veiled version of himself ends up getting massacred in chapter seven.
Over the past few years, I’ve researched blacksmithing, sniper rifles, the sport of biathlon, and several other specialized topics I wouldn’t have taken the time to learn about if it were not for writing. It’s fairly easy to get motivated to become educated on specialized material because it’s new and exciting. However, many errors are made in novels because of the presumption of knowledge. Much of this comes from television where we have spent decades hearing criminal suspects and lawyers claim that Miranda rights must always be administered to a suspect or watching cops chamber rounds into weapons that in real life would have already been ready to fire. Many authors assume this information is true and think certain “facts” aren’t worth researching. Unfortunately, that is when basic errors occur, especially in crime fiction. Thanks largely to the indoctrination we receive from Hollywood productions, writers have to be careful when making assumptions as to what constitutes reality. Even when we have experience in a certain area, the research never ends.
Case in point, I have an extensive background in law enforcement. However, methodologies and technologies change and many of the tools used on the job today weren’t available to me (garble garble) years ago. I narrowly avoided making an error in one of my books when I was writing a scene that involved pepper spray. I was going to have an officer carry a specific type of spray that I happened to know was extremely effective because not only had I carried it when I was a police officer, I’d been sprayed with it in the academy. Trust me. It was effective. Anyway, something made me think I should check with a friend who is still active in my former department to see if they still carried that brand of spray.
“Oh, no!” he told me.
I asked why not.
“It turns out it’s a bit flammable when used with Tasers.”
Good to know!
Well, back when I was a police officer in Virginia we didn’t have Tasers. The technology had changed and I nearly made a silly error in a novel. Now you might be thinking that nobody would have noticed that kind of mistake. Someone…always…notices. And although many writers have better luck getting organ donations rather than Amazon reviews, it will be THAT individual who will write multiple scathing online reviews pointing out the writer’s complete lack of knowledge and total abundance of laziness. That’s just the way it works.
These are some of the reasons I conducted so much research for Record Scratch. Vince was kind enough to help me with the mechanics surrounding equipment not many people understand or appreciate. My brother, who happens to work in the music business, gave me a crash course on recording studios, soundproofing, and an assortment of other items. The chief of a police department in Pennsylvania met with me to explain various training requirements in the state and the sharing of jurisdictional resources. And I may have purchased a turntable, speakers, and several vinyl albums in the process. Research. It’s all about the research. You hear me, IRS?
Note: Always keep receipts for your research.
J.J. Hensley's Record Scratch is on sale this week via Down & Out Books and all major booksellers. You can learn more about Hensley and his books through his website and blog and follow him Facebook and Twitter.
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