Showing posts with label Forensic Psychologist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Forensic Psychologist. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 July 2022

Ellery Kane on Researching for Inspiration

Research is a critical component of my day job, working as a forensic psychologist. Before I ever sit face to face with an inmate to evaluate his violence risk, rest assured I’ve done my homework. I’ve poured over his prison files like the map to a buried treasure, wandering down rabbit holes, following dead-ends, and collecting clues to help guide me into uncharted territory. Through my research, I develop hypotheses that I can test in my interview. Did the inmate’s head injury contribute to his impulsivity? Did her history of trauma play a role in her violence against others? Through research, a patient’s history comes alive and sheds light on the man or woman before me as a complex and multi-faceted individual. 

Crafting suspenseful fiction is no different. With every new book comes research, whether it be cracking open my Practical Homicide textbook, consulting with a firefighter or policeman, watching an episode of Forensic Files, or simply asking the almighty Internet. And any thriller writer worth their salt will tell you they’d rather you not look at their Google search history…especially if you’re an officer of the law. Because it might be hard to explain that search for best ways to dispose of a body. Just as research helps me better understand an inmate-patient, delving into the details of my story gives life to my characters and often spurs new ideas. 

Many of my books are set in the San Francisco Bay Area, which I have been lucky to call home for the last twenty years. San Francisco and its neighboring cities, Oakland and Berkeley, offer a multitude of magical, creepy, and unusual places to form the backdrop of a story. Research here doesn’t feel like work at all but more like a staycation. 

When I started writing The House Sitter, I pictured the main character, seventy-year-old Iris, living in a majestic Victorian that towered above the others on her block. Lonely Iris often spent her time at the attic window, spying on her neighbors with the binoculars her dead husband left behind. After scouting several spots in San Francisco, it became evident that Iris’s residence would be located in posh Pacific Heights, which is known as much for its opulence as its panoramic views of the Bay. As the story unfolds, the home, itself, becomes a character, holding the dark and precious secrets of its occupants. 

I visited Pacific Heights on a windy fall day, snapping photos of the nearby Presidio, trudging up the Lyon Street Steps, and wandering through Lafayette Park, all of which make an appearance in the book. Pacific Heights was also the setting for the 1990s cinematic thriller by the same name, starring Michael Keaton, Melanie Griffith, and Michael Modine. A movie that, similar to The House Sitter, takes the tenant from hell to a whole new level. 

The other two main characters in The House Sitter, Seth and Lydia, had their own story to tell me, a story that would unfold across the Bay in Oakland and Berkeley. I quickly realized that Seth had a problem. He just couldn’t stop betting on the horses at Golden Gate Fields. As I researched the racetrack on Google Maps, I found myself drawn to a small outcropping of tree-covered land that extended into the bay: the Albany Bulb. I donned my researcher’s hat again and began my search. 

Though I’ve visited the racetrack several times, I’d never heard of the Bulb. But it quickly captured my imagination. Once the sight of a massive homeless encampment, the Bulb has long been known for its unusual artwork made from the reclaimed refuse left behind, including the most famous of the Bulb statues, The Beseeching Woman, by artist-attorney, Osha Neumann. The fifteen-foot woman, made of metal and wood, stands on the shoreline, reaching her arms out, her intentions unclear. To envelope, to greet, to implore, to smother. Streaking behind her, her driftwood hair caught by the wind. The Bulb saw its first artwork in the 1990s, when a collective known as Sniff began to paint old concrete blocks and pieces of plywood. An amphitheater was erected, and larger works like the Beseeching Woman soon followed. 

The Bulb also has a connection to a real-life murder, that of Laci Peterson. In 2003, Peterson’s body was discovered washed ashore at Point Isabel, near the Bulb. In order to deflect suspicion from his client, Scott Peterson’s attorney, Mark Geragos, suggested that a Satanic cult at the Bulb had been responsible for Laci’s murder. Ah yes, the Bulb has certainly proved itself thriller-worthy. 

I decided I needed to visit this eclectic place to see it for myself, and once I had, I knew it would play a prominent role in my story. With the wind whipping through my own hair, I stumbled across concrete and rebar, past strange creations and curlicue mazes. I got lost more than a few times and took a rest near a rock, painted with a message: Aliens Exist. Finally, standing next to the iconic Beseeching Woman, I found what I had come for. Inspiration. 


The House Sitter by Ellery Kane (Bookouture) Out Now

You’re just the girl I’ve been looking for,’ Iris told me, her blue eyes sparkling, when she offered me the job as her live-in helper. Little did she know, I thought the exact same about her. And she was wrong to trust me... As I clean Iris’s large, old house in Pacific Heights, my boyfriend Seth works outside, tending to the lawn and fixing the broken gate. I can’t help but notice Iris’s steely eyes watching our every move. Does she know why we’re really here? Most days we live in perfect harmony, but today Iris is confused. She thinks we moved in uninvited. I pass her a tablet from the medicine cabinet, knowing she’ll soon calm down and remember how lucky she is to have found us. Later that night, the police arrive to find Iris’s perfect house turned upside down, the telephone lying on the floor, its cord severed. They walk through each room, calling out, but the house remains totally silent. You will think you know what happened that night, but when the police discover something unexpected hidden amongst the wreckage in Iris’s bedroom, you’ll find you don’t know a thing.

More information about Ellery Kane can be found on her website. You can also follow her on Twitter @ElleryKane and also on Facebook.

Sunday, 25 April 2021

Yellow Brick Road by Jenna Kernan

 

Why would anyone pack a brick in their carry-on? 

In chapter one of The Hunted Girls, my forensic psychologist deplanes with her carry-on made heavier by the brick tucked inside. Forensic psychologist Nadine Finch earned this odd item by completing a very special challenge at the FBI National Academy. This isn’t just a brick, covered in yellow paint, its precious cargo presented only to trainees who complete a unique fitness challenge.

Have you heard of the Yellow Brick Road? 

I’m not referring to the one from the movie, but the one in Quantico, Virginia. After completion of their FBI training at the national academy, each graduating class gathers at the start of the grueling 6.1-mile obstacle course, fondly referred to as the Yellow Brick Road. This is a brutal course, attempting it is optional, and completion is a mark of honor. Since this is a virtual race, you can run, jog (or walk) from any location you chose.

Why is the course called The Yellow Brick Road?

Initially, US Marines built the obstacle course in a hilly forested area on the grounds of the training facility. The yellow bricks served a practical purpose. The bright color helped marked the trail and kept runners from veering off course in the dark, muddy and sometimes gloomy woodland trail. Inadvertently, these bricks gave the famously tough course its moniker. The Yellow Brick Road was born.

Sometime later, a yellow brick became the trophy that marked its completion. This is not a fancy gold-colored brick or a representation of a brick. It is an actual brick, painted bright yellow and presented to each graduate who completes the run. Written in black, on the surface of the repurposed building block, are the words YELLOW BRICK ROAD FBINA and the graduating class number. For example:

YELLOW BRICK ROAD FBINA 261

What exactly is on that obstacle course?

There are YouTube videos showing the event. This strenuous run crisscrosses over uneven ground. Runners climb large rocks, scramble up steep inclines and down daunting declines. Along the way runners scale climbing walls, ascend rock faces, clamber over cargo nets, dash through streams and crawl under barbed wire.

Want to try your own YBR?

This year there is a virtual run sponsored by the FBIAA Charitable Foundation. This gives all of us a chance to get out and get moving. You can register at FBINAA.org. The fundraiser helps support law enforcement professionals. Just complete the challenge anytime between April 1 and July 18, 2021. The entrance fee is $50 and includes a T-shirt, bib and race metal. Not a runner? Support this charity by buying merch.

Nadine and her yellow brick.

So you see why my protagonist, Nadine Finch, having completed the Yellow Brick Road, returns home with her prize in her carry-on because this article is too precious to check. She is eager to show this mark of her achievement to her partner, Homicide Detective Clint Demko and her friends, but upon arrival, she receives her first assignment and must leave before unpacking. Throughout the story, Nadine is so busy with the investigation, she never has a chance to unpack her roller bag or to show her friends her precious yellow brick. Instead, she moves several times, dragging the suitcase containing the brick around with her. Having Nadine lug this brick from place to place just tickled me. That yellow brick serves as a running gag for me and the reader and toting it about acts as an obstacle course of its own, so that when she finally unpacks that brick, we all breathe a sigh of relief.

I suppose anyone strong enough to complete the Yellow Brick Road would find transporting a brick in a roller bag to be no challenge at all!

The Hunted Girls by Jenna Kernan (Published by Bookouture) Out Now

Stumbling through the pitch-black forest, twigs scratching her bare feet, she sobs as she imagines her children crying for their mommy to put them to bed. By now everyone will know she is missing. Please, please let me find the way home. Before he comes back. As Agent Nadine Finch rushes to investigate the murder of newlywed Nikki Darnell in Ocala National Forest, Florida, fear floods her body. She swore she’d never set foot here again, not since the case fifteen years ago which tore her life apart. But taking in the triangular cuts scarring Nikki’s perfect pale skin, she knows she must put her own traumatic past aside to find justice for Nikki’s inconsolable husband.  Discovering water in Nikki’s lungs, and certain the triangular wounds were made by arrowheads, Nadine must convince her team of her terrifying theory: that Nikki was hunted down and drowned before being left for them to find. But what monster would do such a thing? And why? Then another woman, a mother of two, is discovered in the woods, tell-tale arrow marks all over her body. Recognizing the victim as a local waitress, Nadine fears the killer has started attacking women known to her. And the moment she traces the arrow heads to a nearby outdoors store, her own partner disappears. Frantic, Nadine follows the trail to a lonely cabin deep in the Florida wetlands where she finally learns the heart-stopping truth. To save one of her own, she must confront a deadly hunter obsessed with the case that’s haunted her whole career. Will Nadine have to make the ultimate sacrifice to stop him taking more innocent lives?

More information about Jenna Kernan and her books can be found on her website. You can also follow her on Twitter @JennaKernan