Monty McCord, a name synonymous with heroism, fell in love
with all things western and law enforcement as a young boy. He’s not only an
award winning author, but the subject of other authors’ works.
Monty’s own career in law enforcement started in 1974, and
by 1993 Monty held the rank of lieutenant for the Hastings , Nebraska
Police Department when the Chief picked him to attend the FBI National
Academy --the FBI's
academy for ranking officers worldwide with
training at the FBI academy in Quantico ,
Virginia . After working as a
deputy at two rural sheriff’s offices, Monty finished his nearly three decade
career as a Lieutenant of the Hastings ,
Nebraska Police Department.
Monty’s writing career began with his book Police Cars-A Photographic History-1991, then Cars
of the State Police and Highway Patrol-1994, and Law Enforcement
Memorabilia-1999 (all from Krause Pub.) Monty’s works also includes many
articles and historical accounts.
More recently, Monty released his fiction novel Mundy’s
Law (Five Star/Cengage 2013). For his audio book version (Books-In-Motion),
Monty received a 2010 Spur finalist award for Best Western Audio Book from
Western Writers of America and Mundy's Law (print version) won a PEACEMAKER
AWARD from the Western Fictioneers for Best First Western Novel, and a Finalist
for Best Western Novel in 2013. The book was also a Finalist in the 2013 Will
Rogers Medallion Awards.
Monty has also featured his love for his home state of Nebraska in his books: Hastings -The
Queen City of the Plains (Arcadia Pub.
2001), I Christen Thee Nebraska -The
History of the USS Nebraska (iUniverse 2005), and The 1931 Hastings
Bank Job & The Bloody Bandit Trail (The History Press 2013).
Glenda: Monty, I’ve
covered only a portion of your interests and works. However, there is a Monty
McCord behind the books and awards who fell in love with the subjects he writes
about. For this part of the interview, I’d like you to share with us some
history of you and what made you identify with the subjects you write about. So
the page is now yours for as much as you’d like to share.
Monty: Growing
up in the 1950s and 1960s was fun in part because of all the great television
programs we had on only 3 channels. The westerns and police dramas really
caught my eye. Hopalong Cassidy was the earliest western I remember. I
lost some interest when they started singing though! But when Gunsmoke, Have
Gun Will Travel, The Life and Legend of Wyatt Earp, aired, I was really
hooked. When I was about 7, I got my first horse. We soon moved to the country
and added to our herd, which included some cattle. Although we don't have any
now, my love of horseflesh never died. My daughter is infected with it too, she
trains horses and people in South
Dakota . Through all of this and school studies, I was
hooked on history.
Also, at some point, police
programs added to an interest in law enforcement. At my parents urging though,
I first tried training for refrigeration and air conditioning repair, but was
bored to tears. I ended up transferring to marketing and management, something
that helped when I got my first police job in 1974. When asked why I chose
police work, my only answer was sort of a cliché, but it was true. I wanted to
help people. I was in a position to help crime and accident victims, especially
children that I removed from homes due to abuse and neglect. All police
officers help way more people than the public ever knows about. They all know
when bad things happen however...
It is from this background that I write about lawmen. And of course,
lawmen wouldn't have much to do without outlaws! I try to portray lawmen in a
realistic way for the given period in my books. The period I write mostly is
from around the 1850s to 1950s. Crime solving stories are more fascinating to
me when there are no computers, DNA
or NCIC (National
Crime Information
Center ) involved.
Glenda: Almost
all writing takes at least some research. You, as a novelist, and historian
must do week, months or even years of research for your books and articles.
Personally, I’m a great fan of good research, would you mind explaining your
approach to research?
Monty: As
you know, I write both fiction and non-fiction, and BOTH take LOTS
of research. All of my reading of history has really helped my writing,
including fiction. If you're not doing a lot of research for fiction as well as
non-fiction, you're not doing right by your readers. Reminds me of a novel
writing session I took at a convention in New Mexico . They talked about an author who
wrote a submarine story. It went something like this, "Dive, the captain
ordered. So the man controlling the knobs that would make the submarine dive,
turned those knobs and the submarine dived." That's the simple version,
but the original kept the group laughing for ten minutes! Obviously, it
illustrated a lack of proper research for a novel. And, we've all read them!
As far as my
approach to research, I first decide what I want a book to cover and write
notes or an outline. I examine every piece of information I find for leads to
further research (pretend you're a detective). Nearly every bit of info will
give clues to more. You may decide not to use some of it, that's fine, but you
can be satisfied that you've covered everything you could possibly find. I've
learned that when I tire of research for a project, I buckle down and work
harder and longer at it. I've never been sorry; in fact this extra effort
usually produces a bit of solid gold information. Poorly researched books are
dime-a-dozen. I try to not make mine one of them. I also have to give credit to
my wonderful wife Ann, because she is a great research assistant!
Research can also be
an editing tool. Case in point, I just wrote a book review for a national
magazine. The book I reviewed had the incorrect first name of one of the most
famous westerners of all time (more than once!). Part of the problem was an
over-dependence on internet research which rings a death knell for authors. We,
as writers, don't know every fact, and sometimes just plain get things wrong,
so it's good to double-check now and then. Bottom line, don't be lazy with your
research.
I mentioned editing, so will
throw this out here. If you publish traditionally, any real publisher will
provide professional editing. If you self-publish (POD, printed locally or from
book producers, etc.), NEV ER,
NEVER, EVER, be the only one who edits your book. Pay for editing services if
you don't have a contact who knows how, and will do it. One of my books is
self-published and I may go that way again. I have nothing against self-pub,
but it continues to get a bad name because of no editing, or the author does
the edit, AND for non-fiction books WITHOUT an index and bibliography! I have
purchased many self-pub books on fascinating topics (that should have sold to
publishers) but have been disappointed with every one of them because of
these types of problems. 'Nuff said.
Glenda: When I
started reading Mundy’s Law, one of your characters, Lute Kinney, has an eye
you describe as larger than the other. For some reason, the face of Jack Elam,
the old western actor, flashed through my mind. Putting any visual cue into the
mind’s eye of the reader takes a keen mind’s eye from the author and a way to
describe it. When choosing your characters and describing them, what do you ask
yourself in order to answer that same question for the reader?
Monty: Oh
yes, the reference to killer Lute Kinney was, "One eye socket looked
larger than the other, and no one knew if he was born that way or it was the
result of an injury." Now, we shouldn't give a detailed description of
everyone and everything in our books, but we DO want our readers to be intimate
with our primary characters. Regarding Lute Kinney, he is a cold-blooded
killer, so his description leans toward something un-attractive instead of describing
his "smooth golden skin" for example. I don't mean that he should be
made into a caricature either. And of course, some killers look very handsome
or attractive. We have to decide how we want him to appear in a given story.
I try to avoid describing my
characters like I'm reading from a police report. Here's another character from
Mundy's Law, Judge and Justice of the Peace Elsworth T. Worden..."with
a white beard and soon-to-match hair. Tufts of hair protruded from both sides
of his head and on top, which combined with the beard, covered all of the
points of a compass." There's a little more to his description as he
is a regular in the story. For a character who only appeared once, but in an
important scene, I described..."Elizabeth Ranswood was a handsome woman
of forty-three years. She sat erect on a velvet-upholstered armless chair and
waited for Lyman to speak. Her red hair was piled and pinned on top of her
head, her blue taffeta dress immaculate."
Study people and
think how you would describe them. I write only period 1950s and older, nothing
modern, there's plenty of that now. Some people I see in public are easy to
imagine in a different time period and place. Some look like bad guys and some
fit other characters we need for our stories. This is only one source, books
are another.
Glenda: From the
time you were a young boy, you’ve also had an interest in horses. You’ve also
raised quarter horses. We can escape into our writing and we can escape into
reading a book by another author. However; we also need a way to escape from
books. You also worked many years in law
enforcement, which must be stressful. Are horses a way for you to escape in
another way?
Monty: I wish horses were one of those escapes, but
we don't have them anymore. But, I will say that reading is still a major
escape for me. Fortunately, or unfortunately(!), I have fairly wide interests.
I claim to be a closet naval buff which resulted in my 2005 book, I Christen
Thee Nebraska
- The History of the USS Nebraska
and Nebraska
Related Naval Ships. Not all of my interests produce books and probably
never will. I'm interested in U.S.
war history, specifically, Civil War naval warfare, World War I fighter pilots
and aircraft and Indian War cavalry. Other interests are Jack the Ripper (I own
30 books), miniature models, photography, 19th century architecture, dirt track
auto racing and the old auto thrill shows, Husker football and Boston Red Sox
baseball. I've also collected police badges and memorabilia for 40 years. I
enjoy all of these things through reading and movies. Watching old movies is
most likely my favorite escape.
What can I learn from Monty McCord in this interview? First
I’ve learned that Monty is a conscientious author. He doesn’t cut corners, like
doing a bit of research and filling in the rest. That happens more than I’d
like to see. I’ve learned that Monty loves to bring history to life for us in
both his fiction and non-fiction. The ability of a writer to bring information
to life with a face, colorful environment, or whatever; is what can grab at the
reader with that “oh, Lute Kinney reminds me of Jack Elam.” That puts a real
picture in my mind, something identifiable.
Monty isn’t afraid to continue his research long past what
may fit in his story, but make no mistake, that information may become part of
another story or article. I never consider research as a waste of time.
Monty’s process and love for his topics make him a sought
after and award winning author. I’d rather have Monty teach me through his work
than to study a history textbook. The one exception being if I’m going to write
about a period of history, then I need to research for myself.
Thank you Monty for sharing knowledge, interests and a
desire to read your works and maybe develop a new interest through them, much
the way you developed interest in westerns and law enforcement.
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