Detective & Mystery Fiction Vocabulary

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Across
  1. 6. This type of detective fiction usually features no explicit violence.
  2. 7. As per the old cliche, this character 'did it'.
  3. 9. All the facts and information pointing towards the truth.
  4. 13. In this type of fiction, the main character is usually a victim, a suspect, or a perpetrator.
  5. 15. This word refers to the detective stories published in cheap magazines in the 30s and 40s.
  6. 18. A variety of detective story. The name derives from the question the detective and reader might ask themselves.
  7. 19. The person who committed the crime.
  8. 21. The person tasked with finding out who committed the crime.
  9. 23. A type of character in certain kinds of detective fiction. Loosely translates to 'dangerous woman'. (Two words.)
  10. 24. The author of one of the first English-language detective stories.
  11. 27. This type of detective fiction reveals the perpetrator to the reader in the beginning of the story, but not to the detective.
  12. 28. This famous detective sidekick was an army doctor.
  13. 31. In this subgenre of detective fiction, the main character is usually a thief.
  14. 32. The way someone committed the crime.
  15. 34. Someone who takes the law into their own hands, like Batman.
  16. 35. During this process a dead body is examined for information to help solve the murder.
  17. 37. This rule means that the author must provide the reader with enough clues to solve the mystery themselves. (Two words.)
  18. 38. The act of taking another person's life, and often the focus of detective fiction.
Down
  1. 1. Latin for 'elsewhere', having one of these means someone could not have committed the crime.
  2. 2. A detective one can hire for a fee. (Two words.)
  3. 3. A person who may have committed a crime.
  4. 4. The reason somebody committed the crime.
  5. 5. A kind of detective fiction which focuses on action, violence, and organized crime.
  6. 6. A piece of information used to help solve a crime.
  7. 8. When a story ends in the middle of the climax.
  8. 10. This Latin phrase means a person can only be found guilty of a crime after it is proven that a crime was committed at all.
  9. 11. Another word for detective.
  10. 12. Someone who saw the crime being committed.
  11. 14. Sherlock Holmes uses this method of reasoning to solve crimes.
  12. 16. Scientific tests or techniques used to solve a crime.
  13. 17. The anxious feeling detective fiction creates in its readership.
  14. 20. One of Agatha Christie's most famous detectives.
  15. 22. Another word for robbery.
  16. 25. Someone who helped commit the crime.
  17. 26. A false clue, or a clue which points in the wrong direction. (Two words.)
  18. 29. A fancy word for 'enemy'. Sherlock Holmes's is Moriarty.
  19. 30. The element in a detective story that causes worry and anxiety in the reader.
  20. 33. The act of breaking into a house.
  21. 36. An act which is against the law.