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Themes of 'A Mother and a Murder'

Some of the themes that helped me to create the story of a mother wrongly accused of murder…..   I needed to look back at the various points in my own life which have prompted me to think about situations where different feelings, particularly joyful ones, had to be brought out during melancholy times. This was required when I had to add information on the joyful past of a character whose current situation was extremely tragic. This was required in order to create a background for a family which was torn apart by the murder of one of its members. This I found rather difficult to do as I had to think from the point of view of the main character who was not only dealing with the loss of her husband but also with the challenges of carrying on without him. I related this to the movie “You’ve Got Mail” where Meg Ryan’s character is forced to carry on after the loss of her mother and her bookshop. I also thought that the story required a backdrop of the family prior to the murder. Fo

A Mother and a Murder

It was a horrible sight to bear, a lifeless body which had been shot multiple times. There was blood on both, the wall and the floor. Mrs Hannah Albrecht walked into the house. On seeing her dead husband, Bryce, she let out a scream of horror and immediately called 911. Police, Detectives and paramedics converged on the house. While Police immediately began creating a crime scene area, Detectives got to questioning Ms Albrecht who was noticeably shaking. When she calmed herself, she said, “I just came in to see my husband lying here” and she pointed at him as he was being examined. She said that he often came home before she did from work. Their two children, 8-year old Lucy and 9-year old Charlie would come home by bus.   Her children arrived a few minutes later and were confused by all the activity in the house.   “What’s wrong Mummy? And where’s Daddy?” asked Lucy. A grieving Hannah hugged her children saying “Daddy’s gone, we won’t see him anymore”. They were clearly in a stat

Thematic Review of Kiss the Girls

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  Kiss the Girls , written by James Patterson, was published by Little Brown and Company in 1995. It is the second novel about African-American Forensic Psychologist and Police Detective Alex Cross. The plot of the Novel follows Alex Cross on a new adventure as he is called to North Carolina to investigate a series of mysterious kidnappings of women, when he is informed that his niece Naomi is missing. While investigating where she and the other women could be, he and detectives Sampson, Nic Ruskin and Davey Sikes come across a murdered woman who they find bound to a tree in the woods. Meanwhile, medical intern Kate McTiernan is kidnapped from her home and upon awakening in her drugged state, she is introduced to her kidnapper as Casanova who wears masks to symbolize his mood. He presents her with a set of rules that will keep her safe but if she breaks them, he would kill her. However she escapes by jumping into a flowing river and is rescued. In hospital she meets Detecti