Let's Play: How To Make An Ominous-Sounding Mystery Title
Mainstream mystery titles have the uncanny ability to turn the ordinary into the ominous. Like a macabre version of Mad Libs, sometimes all a title needs is a combination of a person and a place to achieve maximum foreboding. The Body in the Library, The Couple Next Door, and The Woman in the Window are all prime examples of this. And if you want to turn the terror up a notch, you can never go wrong with adding the word "girl" to let readers know that trouble isn't too far away.
The rules to this game are simple: Match your birth month and birth date to the chart below. Then stand back for that spine-tingling (or snicker-inducing) effect. Who knows? Your title could be the next big name in the mystery genre!
What's your bestselling mystery title? Share it with us in the comments!
The rules to this game are simple: Match your birth month and birth date to the chart below. Then stand back for that spine-tingling (or snicker-inducing) effect. Who knows? Your title could be the next big name in the mystery genre!

Comments Showing 1,051-1,100 of 1,633 (1633 new)



My mom's is The Liar in Room No. 8. Now that I might read.

That's a good trick, seeing as empty implies there's no one around to get killed or to do the killing on account of the zoo being empty.
Of course, the easy way out would be for the zoo to be "empty" because it's under construction and is thus not yet open or housing any animals, making the killer and/or killee likely to be employees or the owners or something. But that doesn't sound nearly as compelling. In fact, that seems rather mundane really.

Actually does sound like a great read and something I could tackle.
And you?

How curious and ironic. I can't drive and Stalker behaviors frighten me the most.

I like it better the way I misread it first...
The Window in the Broom Closet.
Now that's creepy.
SAME!! :)