• Café Life is the Colony's main hangout, watering hole and meeting point.

    This is a place where you'll meet and make writing friends, and indulge in stratospherically-elevated wit or barometrically low humour.

    Some Colonists pop in religiously every day before or after work. Others we see here less regularly, but all are equally welcome. Two important grounds rules…

    • Don't give offence
    • Don't take offence

    We now allow political discussion, but strongly suggest it takes place in the Steam Room, which is a private sub-forum within Café Life. It’s only accessible to Full Members.

    You can dismiss this notice by clicking the "x" box

Blog Post: Research

Latest Articles from Litopia’s Collective Blog
Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.

From Our Blog

Full Member
Blogger
Joined
Feb 3, 2024
LitBits
0
New blog post by Claire G

Research

I tend not to write novels that require a lot of research (regular readers will be aware that I write romance/fantasy and psychological suspense-type books). I’ve got to admit, I don’t know how writers of sci-fi, police procedural and historical fiction do it. To be creative within the constraints of physics, the law and the intricate details of a time period, maintaining authenticity and believability and avoiding the ‘well that couldn’t possibly have happened!’ exclamations of what are often eagle-eyed readers, seems like a mountain I’d find far too daunting to climb. Of course, if an author is an expert in their field (e.g. Clare Mackintosh is a former police officer) this certainly helps!

I’ve always been awed by hard sci-fi novelist, Stephen Baxter. He writes so-called ‘Future Histories’, stories encompassing possibilities in terms of evolutionary biology, and alternate histories. He has degrees in Maths and Engineering and is a Fellow of the British Interplanetary Society. I think he’s an absolute genius and visionary. His novels have truly blown my mind with their ideas and expansiveness.

Historical fiction author Philippa Gregory has degrees in History and Eighteenth-Century Literature. Her novels set during the fifteenth-century Wars of the Roses, such as The White Queen, are incredibly immersive.

But do you need to be an expert to write these genres? In a recent interview, Clare highlighted the value of reading fiction and non-fiction, and even watching TV as research for writing crime novels. Of course, there’s also the internet, libraries etc. Perhaps it’s the case that if you put enough time in, in the right areas, and have a passion for the subject, you can MAKE yourself an expert in it – Malcolm Gladwell’s 10,000-hour rule?



Practical Research

Thriller writer Eve Seymour reports: “In the interests of research, I’ve flown in helicopters, spent a memorable evening with firearms officers in a laser-simulated training suite, flown to Berlin and Barcelona, both for location hunts, and talked to people working at the United Nations and those connected to various charities involved with refugees and victims of war.

All this comes with a warning: if you’ve spent your hard-earned money on obtaining information or oceans of time fact finding, there is a temptation to slay the reader with your newly acquired fund of knowledge. A few books ago, an editor once told me: ‘This is really interesting, Eve, but it doesn’t add anything to your story. Cut.’

I did. Lesson learned.”

Now I don’t have the time, budget or confidence to ride in helicopters (I’m afraid of heights), travel the world (though I’d love to) or approach expert strangers (but I know I need to become more comfortable with this – in her Honest Authors podcast, Gillian McAllister often mentions how unbelievably helpful people are to authors who reach out to them), and I rely heavily on Google. However, we all know that the internet is the Wild West of information and a single source shouldn’t be relied upon, therefore I try to cross-reference so-called facts. For example, I’ve started buying books on crime scene investigation and police procedure, written by those in the know, in preparation for an ambitious idea that I have. I’m aware that some experts, e.g. retired police officers, pathologists, ballistic experts etc offer paid services – an option, perhaps, for those writers, who, like me, are a bit shy about asking for help from strangers.



Emotional Research

Eve says: “All writers are amateur psychologists. We need to know how people tick and how they respond. While you might not experience what it’s like to be shot at, you will know what fear feels like, just like you’ll know how it feels to have loved and lost, loved and found the woman or man of your dreams, got the job you always wanted, failed to get the job you always wanted, passed your driving test, or failed it for the millionth time and, dare I say, obtain agent representation after slogging away for years, or feel the cutting pain associated with your umpteenth rejection.

In essence, we all know what it’s like to feel lonely and unhappy, elated and sad, frustrated and angry and everything in between. These are the emotions you draw on for your characters so that, when you describe them, they are a true representation.

‘Okay,’ you might say, ‘I can do all of the above, but how do I write about something well outside my sphere of experience, for example, the trauma associated with violent crime, either as perpetrator or victim?’

Simply put, it’s hard to avoid cliché, stereotype, and melodrama when tapping into trauma, if you have no direct experience of it. Again, crime readers are bloodhounds at spotting false notes. Best advice is to, firstly, ensure that the stakes are raised high in your story so that characters are forced to grapple with powerful, life-on-the-line events. Be bold in this regard. Think of the worst that can happen to your character then make sure it does. This way, you’ll ensure that your characters are properly motivated to respond truthfully.

Sneak right under their skins and imagine the extremes of human behaviour and what it does to people.

If this doesn’t work, you could always try a more ‘nuts and bolts’ approach, and talk to a psychologist or someone trained to help people who have encountered tragedy in their lives.”



Experience

I don’t write novels which require a lot of practical research. I tried a World War Two romance once and I was stopping every other sentence to look up things like, what would a family of this class in this year have eaten for breakfast? What were their clothes made from? Did they even use this slang phrase in those days? It was a nightmare!

My degree is in Psychology, and I’ve always been interested in why people behave in the way they do. I’ve also struggled with mental illness and, while I would rather not have been through what I have, a silver lining is that I have first-hand experience of dealing with extreme emotion, trauma and recovery, all of which can be drawn from when writing about characters’ internal complexities.

I’d also add that I feel authors have an innate sense of empathy, and a depth of imagination, that in themselves are an instinctive form of research (everyone we meet is a character study, right?). Perhaps this is even the most important form of research. Afterall, the ability to ask ‘What if’ and ‘How would I feel in situation x?’ questions are fundamental starting points to writing fiction.



Final Thoughts

Is your genre research-heavy? How do you navigate this aspect of writing?

Do you have any tips or advice regarding how to conduct effective research?

How important is accuracy to you as a reader/writer? Does it get in the way of story?
---

* Like this post? Please share here
* Start your own blog here
 
Hi @Claire G

I think it was you who saved me from the anachronism of the term Billy Nomates - a quick internet search told me it wasn't coined until 1993, so my characters couldn't have used it in 1974. A small thing, but important.

Personally, I think research or expertise is crucial for whatever genre you're writing in. You say you don't need much research for the sort of fiction you write, but you already have the expertise in psychology which is crucial for any fiction regarding relationships (romantic or otherwise) if you want it to ring true.

Sometimes it's the little details that make all the difference. It might be something that is only mentioned once, briefly, but if it's inaccurate, it could stop a reader in their tracks. Yes, most readers won't notice or care, but the ones that do might lose all respect. So historical facts have to be right. If you'd given your world war two family pop-tarts for breakfast, plenty of readers would have stopped right there.

Anyone who has had a critique from me may know I get particularly wound-up about anatomical inaccuracies or unrealistic clinical settings because that's my area of expertise. [Injection techniques in film and TV are a bugbear. I don't care if it's SFF; if it's a human, you can't inject into the neck. Or if someone spends thirty seconds, often less, doing CPR and then the person wakes up and walks off (I loved Life on Mars, but when this happened in the siege episode, I lost all respect). BTW, if CPR outside of a hospital setting is successful (which is rare), the only place they are going is hospital ITU.]
I suspect people who work in law get similarly wound up when watching court-room drama or police procedurals.

I think a grounding in research methods in either history or science is a bonus (and I'm lucky to have that), but these skills can be learned, and there's no excuse for poor research these days. The information is all there if you know where to look and who to ask. As you say, on the internet you need to be discerning about the quality of your sources, but if you know where to look, there is reputable info for most areas of interest. My tip for internet research is to check that the site is affiliated to an organisation in that particular field rather than just an individual giving their opinion. In any academic field, there should also be links to the evidence that the information is based on. This is certainly true for any medical information on the internet - if it's not backed by good quality research or NHS approved (in the UK), don't go there.

I love researching my writing. Yes, it likely takes up a disproportionate amount of time to make sure that a one-line mention is accurate, but I feel it's got to be done.

I recently had to cut a scene at a party with an argument about Oasis because it takes place several months before they became famous. I was sad to see that line go, but I couldn't live with myself if I left it in.


Neil could hear Bex dominating a conversation in the kitchen, putting someone right about Oasis. ‘That fuckin’ gobshite Liam Gallagher wouldn’t know music if it bit him in the arse.’​

Your readers will never know how much time and effort you put into researching your story. But that's the point - they shouldn't be able to tell anything about your research. But if you haven't researched effectively, they'll be able to tell.
 
Last edited:
Great post Claire 😊

I think I set most of my writing in weird worlds with weird made-up species so to avoid a lot of this...although even then I've had readers nitpicking things that 'don't seem right' within this made-up species. Those readers usually turn out to be right.

One place I've found useful for odd information is reddit, specifically subreddits where aficionados gather to discuss certain things. Like when I needed to know how long a tethered kite could realistically fly without supervision given a steady wind, I asked on the kites subreddit. I got surprisingly long and detailed answers with examples (the general consensus was such a kite could fly until it fell apart).
 
Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
A couple of guidelines for optimum reddit use:
-There may be several subreddits on a given topic. Check all out first to get a feel of the vibe. See which one is most open to outsiders.
-Don't be shy about flattery (e.g., I've been looking at the awesome kite videos posted, stunning!)
-Be upfront that you are a humble writer who has come to seek their renowned knowledge and wisdom.
-Respond positively to each positive comment to draw more aficionados out of the woodwork. Ignore any negative comments.
 
Really great post Claire. My writing is very research heavy. First it's syfy so researching all kinds of anomalies, stars, galaxies, star ship technology, physics. I spend weeks on this. Then a big part of the novel is historical fantasy, wars, etc. Plus a reimagining of Europe in the future. Then there are technical things such as diving or climbing, floods mountains---but this is the easy part since I've done it all and travelled alot. The historical part is what I'm interested in anyway so it's weeks of researching but a labor of love.

But sometimes it's just simple things that require research like if dealing with animals ---how does a horse/goat/falcon would behave?

It's constant stop and go to research and write, research and write. But I don't see another way around it unless I was writing my own memoir I think anything I write has some level of research.

Sources? I start with YT documentaries, films if relevant, move on to books/articles if necessary, also chatGTP saves a lot of time. I'd say today it's easier as people online have really simplified this work.
 
Favorites for my WIP:

newspapers.com - (not sure if accessible in EU?) for any phrase, it provides a histogram of the frequency of the use in American newspapers per year and per state. Saved me from having "lipstick" and "whistling tea kettle" as part of a 1900 story. Plus, the papers in 1900 were much like social media today, documenting the most casual of social interactions, of who had a tea for what reason, what everyone wore, what was served, how the room was decorated.

JSTOR.org - full of primary sources and searchable by year. Goldmine for art history at least. Seems like it might cover just about any topic.

Ancestry.com - military and passport records provide height, eye color, photos of characters based on real people. Census records provide the professions of family members and street addresses. College yearbooks include photos and hobbies. Access to personal family trees allow you to reach out to relatives of a person of interest.

Google books - tons of scanned old magazines.

Smithsonian Archives of American Art - for art history. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution Diaries of artists, letters, photos.
 
Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
Back
Top