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![]() Mystery This week: Clues in Character~or~Elfs Rule!! Edited by: manga_kateMore Newsletters By This Editor 1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions ![]() All that I see or seem is but a dream within a dream. Edgar Alan Poe A mystery is an answer in search of a question; knowing what's been done and the journey to discover the how and why of it. It deals with something unknown to the reader, which the writer reveals in bits and pieces with both subtle and overt clues, drawing the reader into the puzzle. Welcome to this week's edition of the WDC Mystery Newletter, where we enter and explore the puzzle for ourselves and our readers. all that I see or seem is but a dream within a dream Greetings, fellow Sleuths! The characters your sleuth, whether professional or amateur, encounters can provide clues or help or misdirect the sleuth in solving the mystery. Just as Santa can't make all the presents, load the sleigh and fly it and deliver them, he needs a few elves and reindeer and perhaps even a dentist So how do you choose which characters to keep and which to relegate to the status of scenery? Start with your sleuth and the initiating event (crime or other intriguing puzzle). Is the puzzle broad enough to sustain a full length novel or epic poem? Can you develop your protagonist so that the reader wants to follow them on their journey to resolve the conflict? If you can say yes to both of those questions then it's time to look at why you have so many characters helping tell your story. If you find you have as many characters as a governmental body, then odds are you need to start eliminating. Take a judicial look at your puzzle and ask yourself the following questions when trying to decide who to keep and who to delete: There are times when you need a character that is one dimensional. Who they are isn't as important as what they do for your protagonist or antagonist. Secondary characters are (as the name implies) less important to the story. Minor characters need very little description. I think it's more relevant to show their interaction with the sleuth. For example, the gender and marital status of the beat cop summoned to keep bystanders from a crime scene during the investigation is not relevant to the puzzle, whether or not Officer Jones finds a spent cartridge shell in the alley (see-gender neutral). Now, if Officer Jones conceals the shell because he/she thinks it might lead to the arrest of a significant other, then he/she becomes part of the clue and we (and the sleuth) will need to learn more about him/her. Learning to recognize irrelevant and trivial information in the mystery and discarding it before your sleuth (and reader) become bogged down with it, will guide your sleuth and reader to the relevant clues to solving the puzzle. Now, give it a shot, send some of your characters packing and leave but several who we get to know better to guide (and misdirect) your sleuth. You'll find your puzzle is, if not easier, deeper and more believable for your sleuth and readers. Whatever your mystery, be it a novel, a short story, or a puzzle in verse, a balance of clues (and characters) will draw your readers deeper into the mystery and make them want to solve the puzzle a step ahead of your sleuth. Write On! Puzzlemasters ^_^ manga_kate I'd like to share a story submitted to our newsletter in response to a prior exploration - check out this intriguing read
A slightly longer story about a writer that ends up in a bizarre trip through fact and fiction. Now, spend a few minutes (or more) with the following mysteries in prose and verse and see how the characters aid and abet the puzzlemaster ~ and yes, I had to include a holiday mystery for your reading (and commenting
Up for a challenge ~ why not pick a side-kick and show how he/she influences either in-your-face or with subterfuge, the sleuth in a mystery
Submit an item for consideration in this newsletter! http://www.Writing.Com/main/newsletters.php?action=nli_form Have an opinion on what you've read here today? Then send the Editor feedback! Find an item that you think would be perfect for showcasing here? Submit it for consideration in the newsletter! http://www.Writing.Com/main/newsletters.php?action=nli_form Don't forget to support our sponsor! InstantPublisher.Com: Self publishing made easy and affordable. All file types accepted with many options. Starting at $100 for 25 copies in 7-10 days! Visit us today! Thank you for sharing this exploration. I'd like to share a comment in response to our previous exploration. I invite you to visit with a master puzzler and share in the writer's journey From: kybudman I enjoyed this issue particularly, Kate. My NaNo 2010 novel was dead and blind to me, until I interviewed the location itself. When that was done, my characters were present and moving, the plot was identified, and the plot secure. It was a first for me, but it worked! I'm glad you found the exploration helpful ~ and I know since it worked, the journey was fun! ~ Write On! Until we next meet, I wish you each sleuthing fun in prose and verse, and Yuletide Blessings Write On! Kate manga_kate To stop receiving this newsletter, go into your account and remove the check from the box beside the specific topic. Be sure to click "Complete Edit" or it will not save your changes. |
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