Lisa doesn’t see her boyfriend, who she’s been dating for a year, too much on the weekdays when he works four to midnight as a detective. She doesn’t know how to operate a gun, nor does she have any intention on learning how to. Lisa didn’t even really see a gun until she got involved with a police officer.Lisa is just one of the 27 women Alicia Williams interviewed in her recent book, “Women Behind The Men Behind The Badge: Their Stories.”Williams, an Ohio State graduate in journalism in 1980, looks at the women who are in relationships with men in uniform and their feelings toward guns, their significant others working schedule, fidelity, hazards on the job and other related topics.”I browse the book scene a lot, so I tip-toed into the true crime section and wondered what was in there. Everything was about a cop’s life,” Williams said. “I think the perspective that I am coming at is not just the women, but the relationship. I wrote the book so it has something of interest not only for women involved with police officers, but also officers and civilians.”Some of the women Williams talked to worked in the police field and could relate to their significant others’ lifestyle.Stephanie, another woman in Williams’ book, works in jails and has to deal with the people that her husband, a police officer, brings in.”I used to get mad at him, particularly when we first dated, because he would piss (the arrested person) off in the patrol car and then I’d have to deal with them when they got to jail. He’d get to leave and go off to his next call,” Stephanie said.Williams found her subjects by contacting the National Black Police Association in Washington, D.C., the Fraternal Order of Police and the Sheriff’s department. She mailed a questionnaire to each of the women on the list and waited for their response.”Women Behind The Men Behind The Badge,” Williams’ second book, is available at Media Play, Little Professor bookstores, Downtown Readmor Bookstore and Barnes & Noble.