Episode 84 – From The Academy To The Street With Patrick O’Donnell

In this episode, Mark interviews Patrick O’Donnell who has been with a larger metropolitan police department for the past three decades, about his new book COPS AND WRITERS: From The Academy to the Street.





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Prior to the interview,Mark shares a personal update and then also shares the names of the four winners of the print copies of the book UNSKIPPABLE by Jim Kukral (from Episode 81) and thanks his Patrons from over at www.patreon.com/starkreflections for their support.





Before the main segment, Mark shares a personal update as well as a word from this episode’s sponsor Findaway Voices . . .





Learn more about Findaway Voices



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In their conversion, which comes with a disclaimer that Patrick does not represent any specific police or law enforcement agency and does not intend for any of the information provided to be intended as legal advice, Mark and Patrick discuss:





Patrick’s life before police work which included Sociology, Crimonology and an intense passion for musicThe original goal of wanting to become a high school band director for his careerThe restaurant management roles that Patrick was involved in and how being a night shift manager at an IHOP he ended up getting in more fights than in the same time period as a police officerThe various different ways you can get into a career with the police department and the details related to those methods of entryLearning how to read/understand people via experience as a car salesmanThe book (I Never Wore Plaid) he wrote about how to buy a car and navigate car salespeople under a pseudonymThe unfortunate situation that led to the loss of an opportunity in selling this book to a publisherPatrick’s book talking about the loss of his marriage (which is common in the police force) written under a different pseudoynm – Divorced Dad: Kids are Forever, Wives are NotMad City, the post-apocalyptic novel that he wrote under his own nameThe reason why Patrick shelved the sequel to Mad City and started to write a series of books about the police force, which includes the first book, Cops and Writers: From the Academy to the StreetThe seventeen years of working the night shift as a copThe 50/50 chance that the average person has of their marriage failing, how being a cop bumps that up to 70% and how, if both partners are cops, the chances are 90%Some of the basic things that writers can get wrong when it comes to police procedures or protocolsWhat Patrick has learned about book marketing through the various books and genres he has published in



After the interview, Mark shares details on how listeners and Patrons can win a print copy of Patrick’s new book (you have until July 31, 2019, to leave a comment or question for Patrick on the show notes for Episode 84 at www.starkreflections.ca)





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He also shares his thoughts on the importance of a police procedural book that delves into such detail of this aspect of a police officer’s life.





Links of Interest





Patrick O’Donnell’s website Patrick’s Books: Cops and WritersI Never Wore Plaid (Joel Grey)Divorced Dad: Kids Are Forever, Wives are Not (L.J. Burke)Mad City Patrick’s Facebook Group (Cops and Writers)Related Facebook Group: Legal Fiction (Jennifer Severino)Related Facebook Group: Trauma FictionRelated Facebook Group: The Writer’s Detective BureauRelated Podcast: The Writer’s Detective Bureau PodcastBryan Cohen’s Best Page Forward (Book Descriptions)99Designs (Book Covers, etc)Findaway VoicesEpisode 81 – Becoming Unskippable with Jim KukralStark Reflections SurveyPatreon for Stark Reflections







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Patrick O’Donnell has been with a large metropolitan police department for the last twenty-four years, seventeen of those as a street sergeant. That means he has been a supervisor on the street for the bulk of his career. When testifying in court, he is considered an expert in police procedure. He is also an author of fiction and nonfiction. He understands theunique author point of view and can see through a writer’s eyes. He loves helping authors write authentic, accurate, and believable stories.





The music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0





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Published on July 12, 2019 05:01
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