What person does the protagonist typically remind of?
Is it the writer?
Which model do all crime fictions typically follow?
Is it the home-out-home model?
How has the main character's childhood often been?
What is a troubled childhood?
What is the push effect?
Is it when the writers speed things up?
What is a main character often?
Is he/she a loner?
What is the pull effect?
Is it when the writer slows things down?
What does deduction mean?
Does deduction mean eliminating the impossible choices so you're only left with the truth?
What setting is used to make a story feel believable?
What is realism?
how do writers investigate what evil is?
Is it by making a killer the main character?
What are the stages of traditional detective fiction?
Is it stage 1 - a murder, stage 2 - an investigation and stage 3 - an outcome (often the criminal's arrest or death)?
What do the writers typically focus mostly on when writing crime fiction?
What is psychology?
What are sensory details?
Are sensory details smells or routines that make a place feel real?
What can a main character often do?
Can they out smart the killer?
What does red herring mean?
is it when something is used to divert the readers' attention away from the truth in crime fiction?
What is deduction according to Holmes?
Is it to observe and conclude something from the observations?