
In episode 243, “Write a Mystery 104: Suspects, Clues, & Red Herrings,” Meredith Curtis talks about those ingredients that make a mystery fun. Mystery writers, it’s time to create suspects and all those clues that lead the detective and reader to unmask the criminal, and the red herrings that lead them astray. In a classic who dun it, the writer keeps the reader guessing until the end. That requires motive, means, and opportunity. While super fun, it also requires careful plotting out so that you reader can solve a puzzle along with your detective.
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Crime committed, usually a murder. Clues & red herrings followed by detective & readers who try their hardest to guess the perpetrator. At the end of the story, justice is served.
Characters should always be well-rounded.
The Real Murderer’s identity isn’t revealed until the end of the book.
Other Suspects must have motive, means, opportunity, too.
Victim – why would someone kill him/her?
Show not Tell.
Don’t tell us about your characters when you write, show us. It is better for a writer to show your readers your characters, their personalities, and their emotions through dialogue or actions.
Relationships (and hidden ones too)
Published on 1 week, 1 day ago
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