How I Handled Research for this Book by B.T. Polcari – Guest Blog and Giveaway

This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. B.T. Polcari will be awarding a $20 Amazon/BN gift card to a randomly drawn winner. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

How I Handled Research for this Book
I will start this post with stating my greatest fear about writing books. I mean, by far, my absolutely biggest, baddest, most terrifying, fear. And it has nothing to do with getting a bad review. Although, gotta admit, that’s right up there. But it isn’t my biggest fear. What gives me nightmares and leaves me in a cold sweat after one of my books is released?

Someone coming up to me or leaving a comment that something I wrote isn’t correct or possible or even remotely feasible.

Terrifying.

So, prior to writing a story, as part of my very involved plotting process, I research everything. And I mean—everything. No detail is too small. As an example, in my last book, Fire and Ice, I even researched pre-1600s Atlantic hurricane seasons.

I know.

It’s bad.

Now that I’ve bared my author’s soul, I’ll give a little insight into the painstaking amount of research I conducted before ever writing the first words of Lucky Secrets. Speaking of which, as a little reward for reading this post, here is the first sentence of the book:

“I recently overheard my golf-crazy dad go on and on about some of his golfing buddies insisting on taking something he disparagingly called a “mulligan” when they hit a crappy shot.”

How’s that for a hook, pun intended. I could go on and explain what a hook is in golf, but there is an adage to trust the reader, so I won’t.

And no, the story has nothing to do with golf. Go figure.

Back to my book research psychosis. When I begin the plotting process for a book, I create a “Research” folder for all the articles, photos, scans, and similar that I come across as I build the plot out in a document I call my “blueprint.” A typical blueprint for one of my books runs around fifty pages. For Lucky Secrets, my research folder contains 169MB of data (97 files) plus there is a second folder containing 60MB of photos I used to help visualize and build out various rooms of the El Sueño mansion where the story is set.

Keeping in mind that a lot of what I research never makes it into the plot, I thought it would be fun to list some of the subjects and articles I researched for Lucky Secrets. Just remember, this is not even close to being the full list of topics, and what I have listed below might not have been woven into the plot. But this will give a taste of where I’ve been during the plotting of the story, and where Lucky Secrets might go.

• Best Instant Cameras
• Cook Islands Trusts and How to Use Them Properly
• The Cook Islands
• The Best Offshore Trust Jurisdictions for Asset Protection
• The Count of St. Germain
• The Man Who Will Not Die
• Casanova and The Marquise D’Urfe
• The First National of Chicago Robbery
• The Bangladesh National Bank Robbery
• The 2014 Moldovan Bank Fraud Scandal
• How to Steal $1 Billion in Three Days
• Chopin’s Etude, Opus 10 Number 4
• Stan Swamy
• The Theft of Caravaggio’s Nativity
• How Dogs Can Smell Deception and Sense Lying
• Professor Khaw Kim Sun
• Italian Olive Oil and the Mafia
• Eddie Tipton
• Swimming Pool Maintenance
• Numerology
• Truly Random Numbers
• Numbers in Egyptian Mythology
• License Plates
• Fortune Cookies
• Mortgage Fraud Schemes
• Insider Trading
• Arbitrage
• Plane Autopilot Basics
• Money Laundering Through Casino Gambling
• The Dark Web
• The Bhima-Koregaon Case
• The Steve Fossett Plane Crash

If you can figure out the Lucky Secrets plot from the above list, then you shouldn’t be reading this post but instead be writing mysteries!

A big thank you to Long and Short Reviews and Goddess Fish Promotions for letting me share my book and give a little insight into my author psyche (yikes) and the types of topics I research as I prepare to write a book. Which is pretty much everything, as is evident from the above.

And if anybody finds something in Lucky Secrets that is inaccurate—keep it to yourself. Wink.

College student Sara Donovan is in the homestretch of graduating when a mysterious package arrives with an invitation to an exclusive contest. One that will drastically change the winner’s life. Included are unsettling photographs from forgettable chapters in her life and a threatening note strongly suggesting she participate.

With no good options, Sara enters the contest and finds herself at a fabulous mansion up against eight formidable opponents, each with a dark secret and all racing to solve seven levels of riddles and puzzles.

After a contestant’s body is discovered, Sara contemplates dropping out when another package arrives, its chilling contents making clear she’s at the center of a dangerous game with deadly consequences if she quits. But what it doesn’t say is—what happens if she wins?

Enjoy an Excerpt

I spent the first two hours of every workday by myself while Finn was off with Bertie drinking his lunch, presumably trying to forget his ex-wife. On my first day way back on the fifth of August, I enthusiastically reported to work. I was stoked, ready to assist the unrenowned yet Majelski-recommended, and sorta sober, Melvin “Finn” Finnegan, with taking down perps, crooks, and degenerates. Instead, I spent that day and most of the last seven months digging up dirt on two-timing husbands, boyfriends, and insurance fraudsters, and tracking down the last location on the Internet for delinquent debtors and the occasional bond jumper. Truth be told, the only time I spent out of the office was walking from my car to the dang building and then back again for the trip home to Sketchville. But working the streets on a high-profile case? Any case?

Not a chance.

A typical weekday for me consisted of business and criminology classes in the morning, then grabbing a quick lunch of fifty-cent noodles and a cola before jumping in my traumatized hatchback more the color of gray primer than its original black and flying up I-59 to one of the more questionable areas of Birmingham for a scintillating five hours as a part-time receptionist and researcher for Finn. And if that wasn’t enough to light up my life each and every fricking day, my drive home was a daily battle-royale with crazed Birmingham commuters reminding this soon-to-be college graduate, hopefully, that I was no match for their unparalleled skill at breaking every traffic law in the book while exhibiting quite the fluency in sign language.

About the Author: B.T. Polcari is a graduate of Rutgers College of Rutgers University, an award-winning mystery author, and a proud father of two wonderful children. He’s a champion of rescue pups (Mauzzy is a rescue), craves watching football and basketball, and, of course, loves reading mysteries. Among his favorite authors are Richard Osman, D.P. Lyle, Frederick Forsyth, and Michael Connelly. He is also an unapologetic fantasy football addict. He lives with his wife in scenic Chattanooga, Tennessee.

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Comments

  1. Thank you for hosting today.

  2. Thank you for featuring LUCKY SECRETS today.

  3. Thank you to Long and Short Reviews for the opportunity to showcase my latest book and reveal my BIGGEST fear about having a book published! 😉

    I welcome any and all comments from readers. Ask me anything. Well – almost anything. 😉

  4. Tracie Cooper says

    Who or what inspires your writing?

    • I know it sounds corny, but my longtime readers inspire me to write. Knowing there are readers patiently waiting for the next book pushes me to keep on keeping on. They really helped me get through a dark period when I was already into the writing process for the third book (after months of research and involved plotting) when I decided to set the project aside and start all over with the brainstorming and plotting of the third book. I have a post on this coming out soon.

      As far as what inspires my writing, I am a voracious reader of current and past events – local, regional, national, and international news. When I come across an intriguing story, I dig deeper into it and if it continues to hold me and gets my creative juices flowing, everything I dug up on the story/topic goes into my Book Ideas file for future reference. I will pull from this file when brainstorming a plot or during the actual plotting or writing process when I might pull an interesting detail from a story to use or adapt to what I am writing. Bottom line – I use real world events (past and present) as a starting point to the brainstorming process.

    • I replied once to this post but it seems to have disappeared. I’ll give it another go.

      It may sound corny, but my readers inspire my writing. Writing a book is hard, and knowing I have dedicated readers patiently waiting for the next book to be released gives me such inspiration words cannot describe. There was a dark period when I had to shelve a project for the third book because I didn’t think the ambitious plot was at the right time in the main character’s development and maturation. Shelving that project was one of the hardest thing I’ve done in my writing career. However, knowing I had readers out there eagerly waiting for me gave me a huge boost and the energy I needed to start over from the beginning. I have a post coming out on this very soon.

      As far as what inspires my writing, I am a voracious reader of past and current events – local, regional, national, and international. When I come across an intriguing story, I research it and if it continues to intrigue me and gets the creative juices flowing, I put it in my Book Ideas file for future reference during the brainstorming or writing process. Bottom line – real life events provide a starting point for me in the creative process that I can weave into a plot.

  5. The book sounds very intriguing. I love mysteries.

    • It certainly was fun to write – but it took a lot for me to keep things straight as there is a lot going on in the story. All the reviews coming in have been very positive. If you love mysteries, the game Clue, the Knives Out Netflix series, and/or escape rooms, you’ll like this book. NOTE: that last sentence is a paraphrase of a RECOMMENDED review the book received from The US Review of Books. Even Kirkus Reviews referenced the Clue game and characters in their review (“Our Verdict – Get It.”)

    • Then you will LOVE this book. All the reviews have been very positive.

  6. Sounds like a good read.

    • I think it is, but I’m kinda partial. 😉 If it helps, all the reviews coming in have been very positive. See my above comment to Piroska. When writing the book, among other things, I also focused on pulling the reader through the story. I did this by keeping the chapters toward the short side, sometimes breaking a scene across chapters with a cliffhanger at the end of the first part of the scene, use of dialogue, and MORE cliffhangers.

    • It will keep you guessing, that is for sure. And it is a fast read, too.

  7. MICHAEL A LAW says

    This looks like an exhilarating read. Thanks for sharing.

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