Detective Story Essay

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    Detective stories are the type of genre that tends to go way over one’s head. In the sense that we are unfamiliar with dark,mysterious, and uncomfortable situations that we generally would have night terrors about. It goes deep into the idea of a world where there is just one brave soul who is willing to uncover the whole truth. There is always a lone detective that the story is revolved around, a man that is ready to sacrifice his safety in order to protect others. Chandler’s “The Simple Art of

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    “for a book to be described as detective fiction there must be a central mystery and one that by the end of the book is solved satisfactorily and logically, not by good luck or intuition, but by intelligent deduction from clues honestly if deceptively presented.” (James. 2009: 16). This is traditionally conducted via a detective; a figure deployed within the narrative structure ‘whose occupation is to investigate crimes’ (Oxford. 2006: 202). Therefore detective fiction represents an enigma, a

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    Question: What is the function of genre? Would you classify the ‘Purloined Letter’ a detective fiction or mystery? --------------------------------------------------------------- To categorise texts, allows us to view the world from another perspective, and make sense of the world. This is the function of genre. This allows the responder to class texts even further into sub genres, which have conventions they follow to. Such as Edgar Allen Poe’s ‘The Purloined Letter’ can be classified into the

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    horror and detective genres? The one person that included majorly in the push towards evolving the growth of the horror and detective genre based stories we have come to love is from Edgar Allan Poe. Born in January 19, 1809 and later dying in October 7, 1849 Edgar Allan Poe spent most his life indulged in bad happenings such as his loved ones including his mom dying from tuberculosis. Continuing in the future he started to wright and produce short stories in the horror and detective. He furthered

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    Do People Read Detective Stories?’’ Wilson, who at the time was about to go abroad to cover the allied bombing campaign on Germany, felt that he had grown out the detective genre at the age of twelve, by that time he had read through the stories from the early masters of the detective genre, Edgar Allan Poe and Arthur Conan Doyle. Even tho everyone he knew seemed to be addicted the genre. His wife at that time, Mary McCarthy, was in the habit of recommending her favorite detective novels to their

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    psychological and epistolary novel, and the detective story. This paper intends to depict aspects of the novel that make it a detective story. Due to the main character’s disability, the traditional properties of this genre are slightly different. After a short opening, the term “detective story” will be analyzed and the main crime, the murder of the dog Wellington, will be illustrated. Then, the main character’s – Christopher John Francis Boone - attributes of a detective will be described. Next, the role

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    The Coroner's Lunch

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    Crime detective mysteries have captivated readers for years. Throughout time, the stories have evolved in many directions, developing many different variations and adaptations of the traditional murder mystery stories that had been told before. With subgenres such as police procedural, thriller, hard boiled, cozy, amateur detective, professional private detective, and forensic mysteries, there are so many different ways that a murder mystery can be told. The book, The Coroner’s Lunch, falls into

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    Clues from Novel to Screen in the Novel Agatha Christie’s Curtain: Poirot’s Last Case Agatha Christie is regarded as the Queen of Crime all over the world. Agatha Christie’s novels are often related to the Golden Age of Detective Fiction. In this story we can see an intelligent and famous investigator Hercule Poirot. Poirot is a French private who is world renown for solving some of the perplexing mysteries. Several film and television adaptations of Christie’s books have been made and several

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    contrast the two short stories "The Speckled Band" by Sir Arthur Conan-Doyle, and "Lamb to the Slaughter" by Roald Dahl, picking out techniques used which make it exactly, or exactly the opposite of a typical detective story/murder mystery. Both "The Speckled Band" and "Lamb to the Slaughter" have ingredients for a detective story, i.e. they both have a cold murderer who is just a little mad. On the other hand, they are presented to us very differently, making one story very formulaic, and

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    1920s-1930s, the period of World Wars, the genre of Detective Fictions flourished and influenced people. Their popularity, obviously gain support because of the cleverness of murder, styles and detective methods. Generally, a detective fiction starts with a general discussion and introduction of characters, to make readers analyse personality and nature of characters, then a crime took place, for which the family of the victim appoints a private detective, he is considered an outsiders as he does not entirely

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