Mystery: July 27, 2011 Issue [#4520] |
Mystery
This week: Cultivating a Mystery Edited by: Kate - Writing & Reading More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
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All that I see or seem is but a dream within a dream.
Edgar Alan Poe
"If there were no mystery left to explore life would get rather dull, wouldn't it?"
Sidney Buchman
A mystery is an answer in search of a question; knowing what's been done and journey to discovering the how and why of it. It deals with something unknown to the reader, which the writer reveals in bits and pieces with both subtle and overt clues, drawing the reader into the puzzle. Welcome to this week's edition of the WDC Mystery Newletter, where we enter and explore the puzzle for ourselves and our readers.all that I see or seem is but a dream within a dream
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Greetings, I'd like to explore today a different take on 'planting' and 'digging up' clues
My rose bush is beginning her second bloom. She started as a $1.50 stick several years ago and is now about four feet tall, with branches and blooms that morph from the softest hint of pink to a vibrant heart.
What turned this stick with a few potent thorns into a blooming bush of beauty - from ouch to oh, wow. Well, perhaps it's watering, weeding, pruning, or, perhaps it's what's buried in the soil.
Now that's a mystery, I did unearth a skeleton with my spade while digging the 12 inch hold to plant the stick, and a neighbor told me it was a ferret, then took the fleshless skeleton so his young son wouldn't see it and think it was his missing cat; or so he said. But I wonder at the speed with which the stick became a fragrant blooming bush, if there is something else buried there, and why my neighbor was so quick to take the skeleton I dug up in the back yard.
All this is rich compost for a mystery ~ nature holds clues aplenty for the wordsmith to fashion into a mystery to entrance the reader as the bloom of a rose enraptures the senses. There is actually a sub-genre of mysteries devoted to gardening. Summertime, while we pull those pesky weeds to give breath to the prize tomato or pumpkin, prune back roses or lilac bushes, is the perfect time to observe the life that abounds in nature and weave a story of intrigue, mayhem, and mystery. The gardening mystery is generally soft-boiled, with attention to the characters and their interaction with each other as well as the surroundings. Perhaps a summer thunderstorm traps one in a mulberry patch, sheltered by surrounding oaks carved with hearts and names from centuries past. Maybe the nightshade is just so enticing that one doesn't realize it's growing around poison oak dripping dew into the gardener's morning coffee. The scenic descriptions, having your reader partake of the experience with all his/her senses is germane to the gardening mystery, as the setting is often a bed of clues (and perhaps a red herring (buried in compost, mayhap?).
If you enjoy flower or vegetable gardening (I call it playing in the dirt ~ hmmm, a clue perhaps there?), cultivate herbs, or simply appreciate and enjoy partaking of the splendor of a summer day in the garden or a field, add a bit of intrigue, fellow wordsleuth, and there's a mystery to delight your readers. To expand your technical knowledge and make your story believable and 'natural,' consider subscribing to an herbalist or gardening magazine (or check one out at the library). As well as cogent resources, such publications are potential markets for your story or poem of mystery and intrigue
If you've tended your garden of words and have composted and tilled a cool gardening mystery ready for print, perhaps you might consider submitting to one of the publications which for decades has welcomed both emerging and established writers and do let us know when your story will appear ^_^ http://www.themysteryplace.com/eqmm/guidelines/
Write On
Kate
Kate - Writing & Reading |
How fertile the garden, how rich the compost, how fruitful and varied the harvest in prose and verse
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And perchance an intriguing challenge for the wordsmith's virtual 'gardening' gloves
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As the dog days of summer embrace the northern hemisphere, delight in the long days and tend your garden of words ~ who knows what you'll dig up if you look may your gardening mystery bloom resplendent. Do pass along the fruits of your garden (remember to compost the herring ~ too hot for stinky fish
Until we next meet,
Keep Writing
Kate
Kate - Writing & Reading
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