Specifications for Mystery and Detective Novel Writing
Quick Reference
| Element | Guidelines | Placement |
|---|
| Inciting Incident | Crime/mystery occurs | First 10% |
| Red Herring | Misleading clue | Throughout the text, 3-5 total |
| Genuine Clue | Fair play evidence | Before 75% |
| Reveal of Truth | Truth is uncovered | 85-95% |
| Wrap-up | Tie up all loose ends | Last 5% |
Core Principles
Fair Play Principle
Golden Rule: Readers must receive all clues necessary to solve the mystery before the detective does.
-
No Hidden Information
- All key clues must be presented to the reader
- The detective cannot solve the case based on information unknown to the reader
- Secret evidence revealed only at the end violates fair play
-
Logical Reasoning
- The solution must be logically derivable from the presented facts
- Coincidences can complicate the situation but never solve it
- Intuition is allowed, but must be based on presented evidence
-
No Deus Ex Machina
- No sudden new characters introduced as culprits
- No previously unmentioned abilities or tools
- No divine intervention or pure luck
Mystery Novel Structure
Act 1: Setup (0-25%)
Establish Normal World:
- Introduce the protagonist and their world
- Showcase the character's abilities
- Plant seeds of character quirks
Crime Occurs:
- Happens within the first 10%
- Must be interesting/unusual enough to justify an investigation
- Risks should be clear
Initial Investigation:
- Protagonist takes on the case
- First interviews and evidence collection
- Establish key suspects
Act 2: Investigation (25-75%)
Gather Clues:
- Present all fair play evidence
- Mix genuine clues with red herrings
- Each clue should feel significant
Red Herrings:
- 3-5 seemingly promising false clues
- Must be credible enough to mislead
- Ultimately disproven through logical investigation
Escalating Complexity:
- New evidence contradicts old theories
- Suspects have alibis or secrets
- Risks escalate (more crimes, protagonist in danger)
Midpoint Twist (around 50%):
- Major reveal that reframes the mystery
- Protagonist's theory is proven wrong
- A new angle emerges
Act 3: Resolution (75-100%)
Dark Night of the Soul (75-85%):
- Protagonist seems stumped
- All theories fail
- Moment of despair or doubt
Reveal of Truth (85-95%):
- Key insight connects all dots
- Protagonist reconstructs the truth
- Confrontation with the culprit
Wrap-up (95-100%):
- Explain how/why
- All loose ends are tied up
- Justice is served (or intentionally subverted)
Clue Placement Strategies
Types of Clues
Physical Evidence:
- Objects, fingerprints, DNA
- Must be planted before needed
- Importance may be unclear initially
Testimonial Evidence:
- Witness statements
- Alibis and their contradictions
- Lies (intentional or unintentional)
Behavioral Evidence:
- Character reactions to events
- Unusual behavioral patterns
- Motives revealed through actions
Circumstantial Evidence:
- Opportunity, means, motive
- Patterns and connections
- Timeline inconsistencies
Timing of Clue Placement
Early Clues (0-25%):
- Establish baseline facts
- Plant seemingly innocent seeds
- Introduce all key suspects
Mid-stage Clues (25-75%):
- Mix genuine clues with red herrings
- Complicate the situation
- Reveal character motives
Late Clues (75-85%):
- Final piece of the puzzle that makes it solvable
- Can be something that was present all along
- Protagonist's epiphany moment
Best Practices for Red Herrings
Effective Red Herrings
Characteristics:
- Credible enough to seem real
- Has some evidence supporting it
- Ultimately disproven through logic
- Doesn't feel cheap when revealed as false
Examples:
- Suspect with strong motive but solid alibi
- Planted incriminating evidence
- Coincidental presence at crime scene
- Secret activities that look guilty but are actually innocent
Common Mistakes
❌ Too Obvious: Readers see through it immediately
❌ Too Forced: Feels contrived and artificial
❌ Never Explained: Left unresolved
❌ Too Many: Readers lose track and get frustrated
Suspect Management
Classic Setup
At Least 3 Suspects:
- Each needs motive, means, and opportunity
- Each should seem guilty at some point
- At least one should be sympathetic
Culprit:
- Should be among the introduced characters (fair play)
- Must have a logical motive revealed in the end
- Clues to their guilt must exist from early on
Misleading Suspect:
- The most obvious choice
- Strong motive and circumstantial evidence
- Ultimately eliminated through investigation
Sympathetic Suspect:
- Readers hope they aren't guilty
- Has a secret worth protecting
- Often helps solve the real mystery
Character Secrets
Every Suspect Should Have a Secret:
- Not all secrets are related to the case
- Secrets create misdirection
- Revealing secrets advances the investigation
- Some secrets are more damaging than the case itself
Common Pitfalls
❌ Unknowable Solution
Problem: Culprit or method relies on information the reader doesn't have
Fix: Plant all necessary clues before the 75% mark; readers should be able to solve it
❌ Incompetent Detective
Problem: Protagonist misses obvious clues or acts illogically
Fix: Make the detective competent but human; they can make mistakes, but not be foolish
❌ Too Many Coincidences
Problem: Plot advances through convenient luck rather than investigation
Fix: Coincidences can complicate the situation, never solve it; the detective must work to find answers
❌ Boring Middle Section
Problem: Investigation becomes a repetitive sequence of interviews
Fix: Vary investigation methods; add action, danger, personal stakes
❌ Rushed Explanation
Problem: Complex solution dumped in dialogue in the final chapter
Fix: Spread out the reveal; let readers piece it together; keep explanations clear but not verbose
Subgenre Variations
Cozy Mystery
- Amateur detective
- Limited violence depiction
- Small community setting
- Character-driven
- Usually humorous tone
Hardboiled Detective
- Professional investigator
- Gritty, realistic violence
- Morally complex world
- Cynical tone
- Action-oriented
Police Procedural
- Focus on investigation process
- Multiple detectives/teams
- Realistic procedures
- Technical details matter
- Bureaucracy as an obstacle
Locked Room Mystery
- Impossible crime scene
- Limited suspects (who had access)
- Clever method is key
- Solution must be logical
Integration with Novel-Writer Commands
When is Executed
- Clearly define the central mystery
- List all main suspects and their motives
- Identify key clues and their placement
- Decide on fair play rules
During
- Map out clue placement timeline
- Design red herring patterns
- Plan investigation sequences
- Structure reveals and twists
During
- Ensure clues are visible but not obvious
- Balance investigation with character development
- Maintain pacing (action, reveals, complications)
- Track what readers know vs. what the detective knows
During
- Verify fair play - can readers solve it?
- Check that all clues are planted
- Ensure no deus ex machina
- Confirm satisfying resolution
Mystery Writing Checklist
Clue Visibility Framework
Three Levels
Level 1 - Obvious (25% of clues):
- Clearly important when introduced
- Noticed by both protagonist and reader
- Establishes baseline facts
Level 2 - Subtle (50% of clues):
- Mentioned but not emphasized
- Importance becomes clear later
- Rewards attentive readers
Level 3 - Hiding in Plain Sight (25% of clues):
- Seems irrelevant when introduced
- Only makes sense in hindsight
- "Aha!" moment
Examples
Level 1: "Window was unlocked from the inside"
Level 2: Character mentions being left-handed in casual conversation
Level 3: Room description includes a specific brand of cigarette in an ashtray
Reader Expectations
What Mystery Readers Want:
- A fair chance to solve it alongside the detective
- Clever twists that make sense in hindsight
- A competent but fallible protagonist
- A satisfying "aha!" moment
- Justice (or intentional, purposeful subversion)
What Frustrates Mystery Readers:
- Hidden information revealed only at the end
- Protagonist solves it through unshown reasoning
- Forced coincidences
- Obvious culprit with no misdirection
- Loose ends left unresolved
Remember: A great mystery makes readers feel smart for solving it, or impressed for not seeing it - but always satisfied that the clues were there all along.