Monday, April 13, 2026

Research Rabbit Holes by Jenn McKinlay

 The Winner of Leslie Karst's MURDER, LOCAL STYLE is Brenda Gaskell! Brenda, please send an email to julia at julia spencer - fleming dot com (remember the hyphen!) and I'll connect you to Leslie.

 

JENN McKINLAY: Writing brings an author to some seriously strange places. Over the course of sixty plus books in different genres, I’ve done deep dives into everything from how certain poisons work, naturally, to the inner workings of beauty pageants, dog shows, Elvis impersonators, and NFL football teams. I’ve studied conditions like dyslexia and anxiety and interviewed professionals about narcissism and obsessive compulsive disorder. And I’ve done boots on the ground research for settings from Arizona to New England to Italy (a hardship, I know). If you ask me what my favorite research was to date, I’d have to say going to the top of the Eiffel Tower for a pivotal scene in PARIS IS ALWAYS A GOOD IDEA. Hard to beat, I know. 


How about you, Reds? What is your favorite research deep dive and what book did you use it in?


RHYS BOWEN:  Every one of my books seems to involve a research deep dive. Exotic places, other times, the royal family, not to mention poisons and blood spatters. I studied the whole training program for secret agents in WWII. I sat inside a Blenheim Bomber and tried on a flight helmet. I have walked every street in lower Manhattan and at this moment I’m becoming an expert in appraising fifteenth century books! I love the way we become accidental experts!



Much of my research involves a trip somewhere. Researching at the antique Correr library in Venice. Learning to make Tuscan pasta. This is definitely the fun part. Eating on a dock beside the Mediterranean is magical. 


LUCY BURDETTE: With my Key West series, most of the research has been exploring the undercurrents of the island. I did love my two experiences with the citizens police academy and sheriff’s police academy. There is an almost-deserted island I need to visit for next book, though it scares me a little…




Other than that, Paris, Paris, and Paris!


HALLIE EPHRON: Every book has involved a foray into some topic or place I’d never have imagined myself investigating. I’ve been to a brain bank (donated brains arrive in FedEx boxes and get stored in buckets so they look like oversized cauliflowers taking a bath). I was a tourist in an MRI lab (how to kill someone? Let me count the ways!) The mud flats at low tide in and around Beaufort, South Carolina (not a place you want to get stuck). 





I started writing a book about a psych/intern who works nights as an exotic dancer, but realized that research into what that would be like was a bridge too far.  Nope, not going there.


JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: My on-site research has consisted of a lot of hiking around places in upstate NY, looking for likely sites to hide a body and buildings and business that catch my eye - I want to make sure the reader absolutely feels like they are right there in Washington County.


When I wanted to describe Clare piloting a helicopter in the southern Adirondacks, I went to my dad. For years, he had the top of the line, most recent version of Microsoft Flight (with different kinds of yokes and controls to match the aircraft he was “flying” and he led me through the entire spin up process and flight plan - the program let me see what Clare would have seen. You can take the man out of the Air Force, but you can’t take the Air Force out of the man, I guess.





I keep saying I’m going to set a novel in someplace warm (Aruba?) or beautiful (Vienna?) but so far, it’s all snow, mud or high heat/high humidity. Sigh.


HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN: Usually I make stuff up. And as a reporter, I’ve wired myself with hidden cameras (and got caught in a cult once...ahh) and gone undercover and in disguise. Been in prisons and jails and behind the scenes at the airport and courthouse and been with SWAT teams and tear gassed and inside a nuclear reactor. (Oh, and in the FBI Academy, I figured out how to fool the lie detector. They are, truly, STILL mad at me.) I have, though, done a lot of on-line research into the psychology of revenge, and geography of an area, and time zones, and things like “how long to drown in salt water vs. fresh water” and “what are the symptoms of CO poisoning.” That stuff has to be right. Still mostly, I make stuff up.



DEBORAH CROMBIE: I have had such a blast doing research for my books. From the history to tea to distilling single malt scotch, London during the Blitz and Notting Hill in the Sixties, elite rowing, search and rescue dogs, Crystal Palace and the Great Exhibition, immigration in East London, fire investigation, female chefs and life in a professional kitchen, to undercover cops in the Met, and more… How to pick a favorite? I don’t think I can!





How about you, Readers, what informational rabbit holes have you fallen into?



4 comments:

  1. Wow . . . such interesting [intriguing] research!
    These days, the only informational rabbit holes I tend to stumble around in are those connected to my grandson's favorite topic of discussion: dinosaurs . . . .

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  2. My rabbit holes are mostly related to travel
    planning. For our first narrow boat trip, did I present our travel partners with an actual binder showing potential canals (complete with how many locks there were), boat hire bases, etc.? Why yes, I did!

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  3. Well, just now the photo of the Eiffel Tower triggered me to investigate a headline I saw the other day about buying a piece of it. Here’s an article with the details which includes a bit of the history you might not know. https://www.timeout.com/news/want-to-own-a-piece-of-the-eiffel-tower-you-can-now-bid-on-it-at-auction-032626

    I google a lot of random stuff and try to look at multiple sources to find legit information. I never know where I am going to end up. Obscure playing situations in pickleball to find rules that apply is a frequent topic lately. My challenge now is to remember things I have learned for the weekly trivia night we have been going to with friends.

    Thanks for the book win, Leslie Karst! I have emailed Julia my info.

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  4. For my late 1800s series, I did deep dives on Quaker dress and speech, police procedure of the time, how people cooked, and weapons. For my contemporary books I've checked into the care and feeding of chickens, what a ninety year old corpse would look like, hurricanes on Cape Cod, tiny houses, raising sheep, and more. Plus all the poisons! Botanical, biological, chemical, all commonly available and deadly in different ways.

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