B.E. Sanderson's Blog, page 82

January 23, 2015

True Crime Friday - Fictional Crime

As you all know, or certainly suspect, I am a fan of true crime shows.  I like figuring out who committed the crime.  I love seeing them face justice.  I really love all the forensics and the investigation and the personalities involved in catching a killer.

But does this translate to fictional crime dramas?

Well, yes and no.  Certain shows I love, and others I can't tolerate.  It's a personal preference thing, so I'm not going to get into which shows are which.  I do love the ones that tend to stick closer to the reality of crime fighting.  And I'll drop a show if they stray too far from that, or the ones that smush the investigation into a tiny part of the show so they can focus on the drama going on in the lives of the characters. 

I don't watch shows like that for the interpersonal drama.  I used to watch soap operas for that, and I'm over it.

There were a couple shows I really loved that went off the air years ago: Homicide: Life on the Street and Under Suspicion.  The latter didn't last long, but I thought it was the best thing on TV.  And despite the write up at IMDB there, I didn't get the whole "...the unending prejudice faced by the only female detective in a male-dominated police squad..."  She was just a tough chick doing her damnedest to catch criminals.  The former was just gritty and felt 'real' to me. 

After all the true crime I've watched, though, I don't know if either show would hold the same appeal.  It seems true crime has kind of ruined fictional crime show for me.  (Not fictional crime books, though.  If that makes any sense.  Maybe the fictional crime writers try harder to get it right.  Or maybe I get sucked into the story and don't pay as much attention to whether all the procedures are as correct as they should be. :shrug:)

How about you?  Do you watch both fictional and true crime television?  Can you separate the two?  And finally, how do you feel if a writer doesn't get it exactly right?
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Published on January 23, 2015 07:00

January 21, 2015

Wicked Wednesday - Wrongful Imprisonment

I was watching one of my true-crime shows yesterday (forget which one), when the subject of the episode turned out to be a couple of men who actually didn't do the crime for which they'd been imprisoned for 13 years.

Now this was a rerun from 2002, so this happened a while back, but it went something like this:

A pretty, young blonde was raped and murdered inside a pizza establishment.  The police searched for her attacker and hit on the idea that maybe it was these two guys.  So they brought the guys in for questioning.  They said they didn't do it.  The one guy's girlfriend gave him a solid alibi.  The other guy?  Well, they grilled him for two days and at the end of the two days, he confessed.  And he named his friend as his accomplice.  They were both convicted and sent to prison.

Flash forward to 2000 when a convicted freak confessed to killing a young, blonde woman inside a pizza establishment years before. 

The Innocence Project got involved.  They had an independent lab re-test all the evidence, and discovered that the DNA didn't match the two men convicted, but it sure did match the convicted freak.  So these two men - one of whom confessed to the police years ago - we set free.

Except the friend - the one who didn't confess?  He'd been attacked while he was in prison and now he's brain damaged to the point where he will need constant care for the rest of his life.

As for the guy who confessed, he'll have to live with that for the rest of his life, but it's still a better deal that his buddy.  Why did he confess?  Well, the police officers involved threatened him with death row if he didn't confess.  They threatened to make sure he got a cell with a man who would rape him if he didn't confess.  And they promised the guy he could get a lighter sentence if he just told them what they wanted to hear.  After two days of constant grilling, he gave in and confessed.

The guy who actually did it was on parole for some other crime.  When he was released for that, he vowed that he would kill the first woman he could.  It turned out to be that poor blonde girl.  In the interview, he seemed pretty pleased with himself.  Oh, and when they caught him, he was already serving time for something else.

The detective who cooked up the idea that he could badger a young man into confessing, and the officers who helped?  They declined to be interviewed, but I hope they paid for what they did.  I know the police have a difficult job getting at the truth, but I think in some cases they forget that the truth is what they're actually after and instead go for a conviction at any cost.

What do you think?  Would you ever confess to a crime you didn't commit?  What would make you forget your innocence and go to jail instead? 
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Published on January 21, 2015 05:27

January 18, 2015

Covers and Tagline and Blurbs, Oh My!

In case you missed it yesterday, when I did a sort of soft cover reveal on The Writing Spectacle, here's the cover:

I don't know if it's 100% finished, but there it is.

Last night, I sent off the tagline and the blurb to my cover artist so he could incorporate them into additional materials.  You know how when you look at a word or phrase over and over it begins to look weird?  (By the end of the cover decisions, DYING EMBERS looked like it was spelled wrong when it wasn't.)  Well, for me, that tends to bleed over into total uncertainty - where nothing looks right.  I know I spent so much time thinking about the tagline/blurb, and looking at them and tweaking them over the weekend that I kind of went a little loopy.  Hubs and I were making up jokey ones and cracking each other up.

"Burn me once, I'll burn you twice."
"Got that burning sensation?"
"Revenge is a dish best served with a side of fire."
"Fire: It's what's for dinner."
"Who's up for car-be-que?"

So now I'm offering you a chance to be silly.  What's a whacky tagline you would use for a book about revenge and payback and fire and fear?



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Published on January 18, 2015 23:30

January 15, 2015

True Crime Friday - Crime Library

While I was doing research this week for my Wicked Wednesday posts, Google offered up a wonderful resource I hadn't seen before: Crime Library.  (Warning: There's some pretty nasty stuff on the front page there, so watch where you click. I'd stick to the main page links, if I were you.)

The place doesn't seem to have an About page, but I think it's pretty self-explanatory.  Everything you could ever want to know about grisly and gruesome crimes.

It's cool if you're into that stuff, or if you're doing research to get into the mindset of the totally warped, or if you're merely looking for inspiration so you can write a suspense.  (Although, some of that stuff is too weird for fiction, if you know what I mean.) 

Speaking of too weird, I noticed a link on the site to a video of some French dudes authorities are now looking for.  It seems they were at the Grand Canyon, lured one of the friendly, tourist-loving squirrels near the edge, and then kicked the poor thing off.  The squirrel did not survive the encounter and even though it was done in full view of other tourists, the sickos weren't caught.  I hope they catch them and kick them off the canyon rim. 


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Published on January 15, 2015 23:30

January 14, 2015

Wicked Wednesday - The Real Buffalo Bill

I don't know about you guys, but I love the movie Silence of the Lambs. (No, I have not read the book yet.  It's on the list.) 

If you haven't seen it, it's about a young agent tracking down a serial killer the press has dubbed 'Buffalo Bill'.  (Don't know why.  Maybe that's in the book.)  Anyway, this morning, as I was searching for something to write about in today's Wicked post, I discovered the serial killer that Buffalo Bill was based off.

Eddie Gein

Curiously enough, they didn't catch Eddie because they were looking for a serial killer.  One site says he was being investigated after a robbery at a hardware store.  Another says the police went to his place because the hardware store owner had disappeared and Eddie's receipt was the last one she printed before she went missing.  :shrug:  Whatever way the authorities ended up at his place, once they were there, they got the shock of their lives.

Yep, Eddie Gein was a sick freak.  And yes, he was making an outfit out of the skin of his victims (both living at the time of meeting Eddie, and dead - since he was also a grave-robber) - ala Buffalo Bill.  Except, instead of a wedding dress, he was supposedly making a woman suit so he could dress up and pretend to be his mom. 

Apparently, in addition to being the inspiration for Buffalo Bill, he was also the inspiration for the killer in Psycho, and in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. 

Ed was brought to trial in 1957, but was found incompetent, and shoved into a mental facility.  Eleven years later, he apparently got right enough in the head to stand trial for real, and was found guilty of just one murder.  (Something about time and costs and I guess, 'what the hell, one murder puts him away for just as long as all the murders'.)  But he was also found legally insane and spent the remainder of his life in a place for the criminally whackadoodle.  He died there in 1984. 

Good, one less sicko freak in the world.

Have you seen Silence of the Lambs?  Have you read it?  My mother refuses - even though I keep telling her it's not as gruesome as she thinks and probably not as grisly as some of the Bones episodes she watches.  (She loves Bones.)    What about Psycho or Texas Chainsaw Massacre?  I've seen Psycho, of course, but never TCM.  I love suspense - Hitchcock was the master of suspense - but I'm not a fan of horror movies.
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Published on January 14, 2015 05:31