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Mystery: June 02, 2021 Issue [#10797]




 This week: Mysteries of old stuff
  Edited by: Arakun the Twisted Raccoon
                             More Newsletters By This Editor  

Table of Contents

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

About This Newsletter

Quote for the week: "Don't become a mere recorder of facts, but try to penetrate the mystery of their origin.

~Ivan Pavlov


Word from our sponsor

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Letter from the editor

Imagine your characters buying or inheriting a house with an attic full of old things. What might they find there?

A good part of it might be classified as junk, but some items might turn out to be valuable, or at least interesting and possibly mysterious. Here are a few things that might be there:

Books
Old books might tell your characters something about the people who used to live in the house? What did they like to read? Does the book collection contain children's books, mysterious texts in a strange language, a Bible with family records, scientific writings, a diary with someone's forgotten secrets, or a rare and valuable edition?

Photos
Old photos give us insight into life in the past. I love looking at photos of ancestors I have never met or elderly family members when they were young. Old photos can also be a source of mystery. Maybe one family member was always absent from photos or the photos show a person nobody remembers.

Documents
Your characters might be tempted to throw away a box of old documents, but they should definitely look through them first. Old documents such as birth, death, graduation, and marriage certificates can contain important information needed to research family history. They can also be a source of mystery. For example, I found a manifest showing a passenger list from the day my paternal grandparents entered the US through Ellis Island in 1909. On this list, my grandfather used a different surname than the one he was known by throughout the rest of his life in the US. I have not been able to find out the reason for this, since anyone who might know has passed away, but it is definitely interesting!

Objects
Some old objects can be quite valuable as antiques, but even those with no monetary value are fun to look at and can be mysterious. Old coins, jewelry, knickknacks, silverware, guns, swords, or furniture all have a story to tell.

Clothing
Clothing can give you important clues to the history of your characters. Maybe a lady who you remember as always being quite large was actually tiny as a young woman. Maybe a very poor man kept one fine suit carefully packed away. Maybe a couple who never had children have a box of children's clothes.

Something to try: Write a mystery story that involves mysterious old items.




Editor's Picks

STATIC
Twenty-nine  (13+)
There's some things in this world you can't explain. (2142 w) Winner: 2020 Quill Awards.
#2235558 by Nightkeeper


STATIC
Case of the Missing Shoes  (E)
Dick Casey as a kid. A 16 sentence story for the Writer's Cramp. Happy Birthday, Crampy!
#2146821 by Genipher


STATIC
Railway to nowhere?  (ASR)
Old books spark a search with unexpected results [Holiday Short Story Contest, 3/'20]
#2217420 by Writer_Mike


STATIC
The Disappearing Devil  (18+)
A woman married a devil of a man. Where is he now?
#2148640 by Jaeyne of the Free Fab Five


STATIC
A Dinner Party Mystery  (13+)
Life, death, and a second chance.
#2231138 by Cubby~Cheering House Florent!

 
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Ask & Answer

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