<span class="vcard">Written Well</span>
Written Well

Mystery Story Builder

For this exercise, you should have a document open where you can write. Now copy the text in the box below and paste it into that document. This will be the blueprint  for your story. You'll fill it in as you go through the exercise and end up with a basic outline for your mystery novel. You may want to post your story outline in the forums to get some ideas from other forum members.

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Heist/Caper Guide

Originally, our meta-genre was called crime, with mystery and thriller being two sub-genres underneath it. Very recently (2020+), thriller has been pulled off and become its own top-level BISAC code. Mystery remains, but caper (the Heist category on Amazon) falls into a strange corner case that you need to be aware of.

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Mystery Blueprint

Please note that there are a number of famous mystery novels that don't follow this blueprint exactly, and most don't follow it perfectly. If your book still keeps readers guessing with a few pieces missing or added, or with some of them done differently or in a different order, feel free to do your own thing. This blueprint is just so that you can understand the basic format that readers expect from a mystery novel.

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Novel Writing — Revising

The thing you need to know about revising is not to fear it. Yes, it’s a lot of work, but it’s necessary work and, when done right, can be both enjoyable and rewarding. The first trick I learned is to think about the etymology of the word revision: re – vision. You had a vision when you started the book and now you have a chance to envision it again. This is a time of polishing, of perfecting, of insuring your original vision is as pure and beautiful as it can be before sending it off to be read. Don’t...

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Novel Writing — The First Draft

Much of this section is from my book How to Write Fantasy Novels, Volume II: The First Draft, but I have edited it to ensure it is applicable to all genres of fiction. You’ve got an idea and you’ve begun to write. Now what? Now you write until the book is done. Would that it were so easy. But in a way, the best way to get the book done is to do whatever you can to just write. Don’t plan. Don’t think. Just write. In fact, a lot of the advice in this Essential will be centered around pushing...

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Novel Writing—Starting Elements

Before you start the Novel Writing Essential, it’s recommended you read Point of View and Tense from the Basic Writing Essentials. The concepts there combine with the starting elements here in powerful ways. After you finish, further reading includes The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. & E. B. White, Characters and Viewpoint by Orson Scott Card, and Writing the Novel by Lawrence Block. Ideas that can serve as the starting point of a novel fall into a few main groups. You can start with more than one of them—in fact, it’s better if you do—but a novel can be...

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Cozy Study Materials

Remember to read the articles in the Essentials section. These cover all the essential skills you’ll need as a self-published author. They are not just for beginners either. They go in depth on how to successfully write, publish, and market your own books.

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Cozy Guide

Back to mystery One of the most important standing rules of cozy mystery is that you never see the body of the dead guy. Ever. My mother primarily read cozies because she didn’t want any blood or gore. In her case, she also didn’t want any sex, violence, profanity, or nudity. About as G-rated as you could manage. Maybe PG, but the sort of thing that showed up on network television before 9 PM, with all the classical restrictions thereof. If a murder has occurred (and those are quite popular in this genre), the detective in question is usually a...

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Amateur Sleuth Guide

Back to mystery Amateur sleuth is a category of mystery where the main character solving your crime is not a professional. (Easy enough, right?) As in cozy, they might have skills that help them more than the average Jane off the street, but not the training in crime solving. Or the experience. (Or, probably, the firepower that cops and private detectives can bring to bear when they have to.) Instead, you have an everyday person who has become involved in a crime. They can be a witness, a suspect, or even a friend of the deceased. They might be a...

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