Basic Mystery Classes: Difference between revisions

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So you want to have a mystery show? Well, there are only a few kinds of mystery, truth be told. The '''Basic Mystery Classes''' are:
 
* A pure procedural, usually [[Police Procedural|police]] based: We know what the viewpoint characters know. Favorite lurking grounds of [[Your Princess Is in Another Castle]].
* The [[Fair Play Whodunnit]]: You know what the Master Detective knows, and if you're smart enough, at a certain point, you can solve it ahead of him without being Genre Savvy.
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* Owen Johnson's "One hundred in the Dark" doesn't fall into any of the above. The narrator mentions the various types of mysteries, then offers his own original mystery that fulfills what he says are the obligations of a story. {{spoiler|A priceless necklace is stolen at a dinner party. The enterprising victim, who also happens to be the hostess, comes up with a solution that manages to get her stolen property back. However, the result is that the mystery of who took it in the first place will never be solved.}}
 
 
Consult [http://www.diogenes-club.com/knoxrules.htm Father Knox's Ten Commandments] for some additional insight into how classic mysteries are to be written.
 
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[[Category:Mystery Tropes]]
[[Category:Basic Mystery Classes]]