How Does Writing Plot Twists is Actually Simple | Mystery Writing 101 Work?

Writing plot twists is like rearranging pieces of a puzzle to surprise you.

Imagine you're playing with building blocks, each one is part of your story. When you stack them in order, that’s the normal flow of the story. But when you switch two blocks around without anyone noticing, poof! You get a plot twist. It feels magical, but it's just clever rearranging.

Like a Surprise in Your Lunch

Let’s say your friend hides a chocolate bar inside your lunch box, that’s the twist. But how did they do it? They just put it there when you weren’t looking. In stories, plot twists work the same way: someone (like the writer) moves something important around so the reader gets a surprise.

The Secret Ingredient

The best plot twists aren’t random, they’re like hiding a toy inside your backpack before school. You don’t know it’s there until you find it at recess. Writers use clues all along, but you only notice them later when everything clicks together.

So, writing plot twists is just like playing with blocks or finding hidden treats, simple, fun, and totally doable!

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Examples

  1. A detective finds out the thief is his best friend, but it was all a plan to save him from jail.
  2. The mayor’s speech about peace hides a secret war he started with another city.
  3. The hero realizes the villain is their long-lost sibling.

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