The Mystery, Crime, and Thriller Group discussion
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In your opinion, what is the difference between mystery and suspense?
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Georgia
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Nov 14, 2013 10:42AM

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I hope instances like these make up a tiny bit for all the other times when I'm stumbling around Goodreads, blowing my stack like a crazy person. ha! Jekyll/Hyde, I guess.. :(

R.F. Sharp


Feliks wrote: "A thriller invokes excitement by dangerously upsetting something which we typically take for granted in our world as 'stable'. The narrative makes us sweat and itch until it is put-back-in-place.
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Fantastic post Feliks. Thanks for sharing your insight to the topic here.
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Fantastic post Feliks. Thanks for sharing your insight to the topic here.


'thriller'
invokes excitement by dangerously upsetting something which we typically take for granted in our world as 'stable'. The narrative makes us sweat and itch until it is 'put-back-in-p..."
Interesting! I agree that as we become more cynical, mysteries matter less. But as our society becomes more chaotic, I would argue that we need thrillers and crime stories MORE to try and make sense in this world. Of course this may only explain my interest in them :)




You're correct. There'e been a whole bunch of thoughtful perspectives and insights contributed by various members here regarding the topic at hand.

Now, suspense can happen completely in the absence of mystery. Often the unknowns a character faces add to the suspense. On the other hand you can have plenty of suspense if the bad guy is threatening to toss our protagonist over a mile high cliff. Everything's known, nothing mysterious to solve, and yet, there's the suspense: will it happen or will our good guy live on?
Books mentioned in this topic
Complicit Witness (other topics)The Brutal Telling (other topics)
The Erasers (other topics)
Middle Time (other topics)