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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/newsletters/action/archives/id/9119-Staging-the-mystery-crew.html
Mystery: September 12, 2018 Issue [#9119]




 This week: Staging the mystery crew
  Edited by: Gaby ~ Keeper Of The Realm
                             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

It's always wonderful to get to know women, with the mystery and the joy and the depth. If you can make a woman laugh, you're seeing the most beautiful thing on God's Earth.
~ Keanu Reeves

Love is an endless mystery, for it has nothing else to explain it.
~ Rabindranath Tagore



Word from our sponsor



Letter from the editor

Love may be a mystery in itself but combining a platonic love into a story full of crime, can be quite difficult. A good story can keep you on the edge of your seat from the first page until the last, it's what stays with you after you read that last page that matters.

Most of us tend to focus on staging the crime scene, the who dun it part and why, with characters who come together at the important intervals. We thrive on presenting an amazing picture of words to our reader so they can enjoy it. There's nothing better than the inability to put down a book. Most readers who are enthralled with a story will keep going against their own warnings. The question remains, are the characters memorable as well as the crime itself?

There are many writers out there who use the same character continuously but add new main characters for each book as well as the minor ones. Of course, the crime and mystery is always a new and exciting one, but what if you could have more than one character who stays present in following books? What if their relationships were simply platonic?

The more characters you keep and want to keep, they have to have some kind of relationship to each other. The show Criminal Minds is a perfect example of criminal investigations containing the same characters but they differ from others. Their relationship is more tight-knit as they aren't simple co-workers but also friends who care about each other and each others problems. A family that consists of random strangers in the beginning is a story unto itself which connects readers to it.

Try building sturdy walls of your plotting with characters who connect on a personal level with each other while introducing a random crime into the story and see if you might enjoy a path like that.


'Til next time!
~ Gaby *Witchhat*


Editor's Picks

 Chloe and It  (GC)
At the suggestion of her brother Cam, Chloe tries her hand at monster hunting as a career.
#2168567 by Tick Tock I am a Clock

 Homicide in the Headlines  (E)
Beginning of a mysteryl, a WhoDunIt Award winner. Published by Absolutely Amazing Books.
#2168200 by Mr. Z

 Eighteen Yellow Roses  (13+)
But was that all? (Winner, Cramp)
#2168166 by THANKful Sonali LOVES DAD

 18 Yellow Roses Arrived Today  (13+)
A mystery... 18 yellow roses arrived today.... with no note.
#2168176 by 💙 Carly

 Happy Nights Inn  (13+)
Bone chilling tale of a man lost in an unknown town, set against the backdrop of winter.
#2167680 by R

 Invalid Item 
This item number is not valid.
#2168208 by Not Available.

 Missing Murder Mayhem  (18+)
A police drama
#2168145 by Jack Henry

 
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