When the TV show CSI came on the air, the writing of crime
fiction drastically changed. Before CSI, crime fiction writers could gloss over
some of the details that were known more to the specialized scientist who
assist criminal investigators in their investigation. We didn’t get the
information wrong (or at least not usually), but we didn’t have to go into the
details. After CSI, the public expects the crime writer (fiction or
non-fiction) to stay up-to-date in this rapidly changing science. True Stories of C.S.I.: The Real
Crimes Behind the Best Episodes of the Popular TV Show is one resource to help writers to
maintain be on top of these sciences. (Note: I said sciences, as CSI or
Criminal Lab work involves many sciences. Unlike some of the lab technicians,
we need to have a working grasp on the big picture. While Crime Fiction stories
and Science Fiction have often shared many of the same audience, the two genres
are now bleeding into each other in ways we haven’t really seen since the
advent of Sherlock Holmes, the first fictional forensic detective.)
If you have never seen a real
crime scene, count yourself lucky. But,
if you are going to open this book you need to prepare yourself for blood,
dismembered bodies, and much more as author and Forensic Expert and Forensic
Psychologist Katherine
Ramsland will walk you through the real life cases that the hit TV show
episodes were based on. She
also looks into the authenticity of the forensic investigations recreated for
the dramatizations, and the painstaking real-life forensic process employed in
every one of the actual cases-from notorious mass-murderer Richard Speck, to
the massacre of Buddhist monks in an Arizona Temple, to a baffling case of
apparent spontaneous combustion.
If you are looking to incorporate
forensic sciences into your crime fiction novel or if it is part of the work of
true crime you are working on, this book is a good launch pad into those
science.
Thank you for reading and please
visit www.davidalanlucas.com and www.thewriterslens.com. You can also follow me
on twitter @Owlkenpowriter and the Writer’s Lens @TheWritersLens. Fiction is
the world where the philosopher is the most free in our society to explore the
human condition as he chooses.
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