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4 answers

Yes there absolutely is. With one stipulation. In these days of TV shows like CSI and such, you MUST do a ton of research and be extremely accurate with your details. Readers will rat you out instantly - so will agents and publishers. I work with a team. I have a cop, a retired fed, a lawyer, a forensics guy, a munitions expert, a doctor, a psychologist, and many others. When I cannot get the details I need, I turn to one of them. It took me a long time to build up that team. I am also getting ready to start studying forensics myself.

You should also know that mystery stories are mostly character driven - which means detailed and exhaustive character studies (hence the psychologist on my team) ... Mysteries aren't about how - they are about why ... What makes people tick ...

It's all about research and accuracy these days. Unfortunately we cannot all be like James Patterson and have two research assistants (who don't always get it right anyway). Most of us do our own. I estimate I spend about 5 times as much time researching as I do writing.

If you have that kind of time to put into mystery stories and can do that kind of research, go for it. Most people write fantasy though - because they don't want to do the homework. Pax - C

2007-08-20 11:08:39 · answer #1 · answered by Persiphone_Hellecat 7 · 0 0

Of course. This is a little bit of a generic question though. It could be a sci-fi or horror private detective mystery for example. I think anything can be marketed if it is well written and targeted to the correct audience. Just look at Harry Potter.

2007-08-20 11:05:10 · answer #2 · answered by Ralph 7 · 0 0

Jose, at the beginning you should decide what the key's. that's a stolen artifact, a lifeless physique, a bomb that went off. All 3 of those upload as much as a 'Who carried out It.' i could commence out with some paragraphs (if this could be a short tale) or a prologue (if that's a different) that provides the reader an concept of precisely what befell, and a character who's on the scene working the analyze. After that, you flow from there. you could take the protagonist (the sturdy guy/gal) someplace else, or you could take the antagonist (the undesirable guy/gal) someplace else. secret & Suspense memories are no longer ordinary to place in writing. particularly some analyze sometimes falls in with each and each novel or short tale. sturdy success! PJ M

2016-10-02 23:08:40 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

There will always be a market for that genre. Matter of fact, if you read science fiction or fantasy, most of those books have storylines that are quite alike myteries, so do thrillers such as Dan Brown's da Vinci Code, Matthew Reilly's books, Jack DuBrul's books, Paul Christopher and many many others.

2007-08-20 11:04:42 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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