Want this question answered?
Moriati, like in Sherlock Holmes
The simple answer is that there are 39 steps in Broadstairs, Kent, England leading into the sea. John Buchan used these steps as the basis of the end of the novel. It seems as good as number as any, so he probably thought he didn't have to change it.
The villians in a novel don't need to be bad they can act to be good or you can just let the reader know that they are bad itself
A good novel reveals the plot a little at a time as it goes on.
Writing is always a good idea -- click on the links below to help you learn how.
In novel studies? Yeah! Okay maybe researching the author or writing a story/poem.
Robert Louis Stevenson is famous for writing the novel "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," which explores the duality of human nature by depicting a character who embodies both good and evil traits.
Mind control!
No, he is not, the villain is Blackbeard and his crew of villians. And his daughter, Angelica, who is one of Jack's used to be girlfriends, is a good guy and villain.
well a question will be good as a entering because it is called (hook) the person to get them to read it
For a mild novel, try names like Annabell and Max for the good characters, and names like Brittany and Edward for the bad ones. If its a scary/violent novel, try names like Josephine and Charlie for the good characters, and Velvet and Xavior for the bad ones. Finally, if you were writing a novel that takes place a good chunk of time ago, use names like Elizabeth and Jacob for the good characters, and Nina and Charles for the bad ones.
When there is a good villain in store for Superman.