Genre of fiction usually involving a mysterious death or a crime to be solved.
Sinónimos
Examples for "mystery"
Examples for "mystery"
1We did know, however, that some mystery-somepositive danger-overhung our father.
2Cozies, thrillers, paranormals, police procedurals; every possible mystery genre to choose from.
3Of course, Mr Putin's personal relationships have long been shrouded in mystery.
4The boy pointed in the direction in which the mystery had appeared.
5It's still a mystery; no one seems to know exactly what happened.
1But in their true state I think the mysteries were really good.
2Of course, I believe there are mysteries none of us can explain.
3Clearly the writer of this believes in prophecies, in tongues, in mysteries.
4There were a thousand mysteries, a thousand things I wanted to know.
5The suspense is superb.... Barron brings historical mysteries to a new level.
1Really, Major, you seem to have made a speciality of detective fiction.
2The best buy in detective fiction for many a long day.
3What frivolity was detective fiction, compared to the hard-nosed reality of true literature!
4I don't have to shoehorn it into a detective fiction format.
5He also found time to keep up his reading of detective fiction, which he also enjoyed reviewing.
1Another gentleman, hurrying to catch a train, dashed into Womrath's for a mystery books.
2You read enough mystery books, you find that cooking is practically a pre-requisite for a gumshoe.
3Everyone carries a Glock in the mystery books.
4She doesn't read crime or mystery books.
1And me must thank Dame Agatha herself for one of the great solutions in mystery literature.
1Otto Penzler has an encyclopaedic knowledge of the world of mystery fiction.
2He switched to crime and mystery fiction in the 1970s.
3Mystery fiction has entire subgenres about rogues.
Translations for mystery fiction