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Saturday 26 January 2013

If You Want To Write Successful FBI Books Research And Hard Work Is Crucial

By Emilia Espinoza


Writing about crime or espionage is something that many writers want to do, with the genre's popularity not looking like declining any time soon. Many FBI books later become very famous films or television series, which can be very lucrative for the author who wrote the original story. Writing a novel is hard work though, and there are a number of factors which need to be carefully considered before you put pen to paper.

All writers need to create stories which are credible and believable, all the events and actions need to fit consistently into the world that the author has created. To give a novel about the FBI credibility of this sort requires thorough research. You will require a good working knowledge of FBI modes of work, procedures and methods, for a start.

Relying on television series and movies will not be enough for this research. You need to read factual accounts of life in the FBI, and if possible speak to real life FBI agents about the kinds of procedures and cases that they are involved in. This will really pay massive dividends for your novel and is never time wasted.

Indeed, by looking closely at the real-life FBI, you may even find that you come up with more ideas for your story, ideas which will improve and polish your original idea into something better. Another important facet to this research is how it influences your characters too. Having a strong central character, supported by other credible and believable characters, will make your story much better.

One factor which you must have in any story is conflict, and a thriller of this kind requires clearly defined conflict. This does not mean fighting or battles, but rather aims and desires which events have frustrated. In an FBI context, the conflict could be the search for a key witness or a piece of clinching evidence, for example.

Setting an accurate historical era in the novel is also key to making your story successful. You need to use period detail to set up an accurate representation of the era in which the book is set. Technology, which plays such a key role in FBI work, is a good way of doing this, though you need to be aware of anachronisms, so do not have 1960s agents using laptops, for example.

By the same token, make sure that names of cars and brands of goods also reflect the era that you are using. This can be tricky to accomplish if your book spans several different eras. Readers will notice anachronisms and errors far more easily than you might think they do though, so research if you are in any doubt about any period details.

FBI books are not easy to get right, they require research and planning, as well as writing talent and the skill to tell a gripping story. Make sure that you put the hours in when it comes to research and you will find that it pays off. Your work will be much more satisfying as a story, and is sure to have greater appeal to readers and publishers.




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