"Detective career" Essays and Research Papers

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    the puzzle game

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    all detective stories. The puzzle game demonstrates how all detective stories follow a “puzzle tradition” that produce the reader with intrigue and intellectual stimulation. The puzzle games found in detective stories operate on multiple levels with varying complexities derived by an ingenious author. These games follow many variations and rules‚ but will never allow you to fully comprehend who the victim‚ the murder‚ and sometimes even who the sleuth is in the story. Two fascinating detective stories

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    his purpose to investigate the gospels (as well as other New Testament books) in the same manner he would an eyewitness testimony of a crime scene. In the first half of the investigation‚ Wallace teaches his reader how to be a detective. Initially‚ he tends to describe detective work like emphasizing the power of circumstantial evidence‚ the danger of presuppositions‚ and the critical use of abductive reasoning (distinguishing reasonability versus possibility). He later ties in the process with the

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    analysis

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    Analysis of an Argument In the essay‚ “We all said‚ ‘She will kill herself’”: The Narrator/Detective in William Faulkner’s‚ “A Rose for Emily‚” Lawrence Rodgers provides an effective argument in which he proves how the narrator in the story may very well serve as the towns’ detective. Rodgers uses John Cawelti’s useful and simple litmus test in order to establish whether the text follows the classical detective formula. The critic argues that “A Rose for Emily” meets three conditions that are: 1) the

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    The detective story‚ first invented by Edgar Allen Poe‚ grew immensely popular with the introduction of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes. The introduction of a single character solving many cases proved a successful strategy for selling stories‚ and Doyle wrote many installments of his ever-popular character’s experiences. Agatha Christie’s character Hercule Poirot also exploded in popularity. Since Doyle and Christie’s work‚ detective and mystery stories have remained in the spotlight. The

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    Purloined Letter

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    Edgar Allan Poe’s The Purloined Letter is widely considered the greatest of his three detective short stories. The story revolves around C. Auguste Dupin‚ a detective who also appears in Poe’s other two detective works The Murders in the Rue Morgue and The Mystery of Marie Rogêt‚ and the Paris police as they try to solve the mystery of a missing letter. The letter contains important information about a political figure in a high position that could potentially this person‚ which causes serious concern

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    Unsolved mysteries aren’t just a mysterious topic‚ or what their name implies. They’re much more. They have hidden stories behind just their name. All the conspiracy theories‚ demonic acts‚ disappearances‚ cryptids‚ extra-terrestrials and homicides don’t just leave us wondering & curious‚ they leave us lost. They have us lost in our thoughts; a thought of what truly is reality. Human nature was guided by curiosity‚ the ability for us to learn and be innovative. Unsolved mysteries are also guided

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    her strong morality. Next to Sherlock Holmes‚ Hercule Poirot and Miss Jane Marple are two of the most recognizable detectives in fiction because of their distinctive attributes. Hercule Poirot‚ the Belgian detective‚ is noted for moustaches and his “egg-shaped head”. From the rather violent village of St. Mary Mead‚ Miss Jane Marple is known for her knitting needles. A third detective‚ Ariadne Oliver‚ is an author with a fondness for apples. Interestingly‚ the last character is also thought to be

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    Rules for Writing Detective Stories"(1928)." Twenty Rules for Writing Detective Stories (1928) by S.S. Van Dine. N.p.‚ Sept. 1928. Web. 12 May 2013. . Based off the practice of other writers‚ Van Dine‚ an art critic and detective novelist‚ lists a statement of beliefs that guide novelist to what a detective novel should consist of. Originally published in American Magazine in 1928‚ the online webpage challenges the conventions of the genre through a credo of rules that each detective novelist must consider

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    Stephanie Sheaffer Sheaffer 1 Mrs. Petrunek English 12 CP 4 January 2013 The Murder of Roger Ackroyd Agatha Christie has written many mystery novels‚ but none of them are like The Murder of Roger Ackroyd. A surprising realness when in the end‚ the narrator is the murderer. From the very beginning to the very last sentence the reader will be hooked. “The Murder of Roger Ackroyd proved to be the first in a long string of superlative and highly original mystery novels that made

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    A rose for emily

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    ideas and visions of someone that lives in the town. It lets us know of what the people in the town thought of Miss Emily‚ and the things she was going through. The structure also does not follow a chronological order which plays out like that of a detective story. Also the story has different sections that don’t go detail to detail it skips some detailed parts of the story that keeps us guessing. This story is not a traditional because it does not start off with a beginning to ending type of

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