She's a mystery writer.
It's a classic kind of like murder on a train.
It comes from Greek "agathos", meaning "good".
The Mousetrap by Agatha Christie is a play about a murder mystery. If you are referring to the kind of medieval religious play called a "mystery play" a famous example is Everyman.
Detective novels, more specifically murder mysteries. That is, in her stories usually a murder or more than one is committed, and somebody tries to figure out who did it.
a story that reflects who you are, somthing that you will enjoy writing about and not get bored and through it away,
The world's best-selling fiction writer is the late Dame Agatha Christie (née Miller, later Lady Mallowan, 1890-1976), whose 78 crime novels have sold an estimated 2 billion copies in 44 languages. Agatha Christie (UK) also wrote 19 plays and, under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott, six romantic novels.
No-one knows. She went missing from her home in Berkshire, leaving a note saying that she was going to Yorkshire. She was found in Yorkshire eleven days later, in a hotel in Harrogate. This happened after her husband archie left her having had an affair, she obviously had a nervous breakdown...it was never really explained, and it was understood that she did not wish to talk about it.
Agatha comes from the Greek name meaning "virtuous, good".
Honestly, if you have no idea what to write about, you should not write this story! If you have a story you want to write, you will know what will happen. Try to choose a different kind of story that is really interesting to you, and you will be able to tell what should happen. Click on the Related Questions for more help!
Tom learned to read and write from a kind priest who took him in and taught him in the story "The Prince and the Pauper" by Mark Twain.
What kind of story do you want it to be? Thrilling, moving, hilarious..? All you have to do to begin is think of an audience, theme, and a problem to put your characters in. Then once you've got a resolution and a loose storyline, it's time to write.
In Louisa May Alcott's book Little Women, Jo writes a sensational news story for the newspaper. She wins the $100 dollar prize, but her father does not believe in her talent for writing.