One early and prominent example of this subgenre is
Malice Aforethought, written in 1931 by
Anthony Berkeley Cox writing as Francis Iles.
Freeman Wills Crofts's
The 12.30 from Croydon (1934) is another important instance. '' The 1952 BBC television play
Dial M for Murder by
Frederick Knott (later adapted for the stage and then adapted again in 1954 as a theatrical film by
Alfred Hitchcock) is another example. Tony Wendice outlines his plans to murder his wife Margot in the opening scenes, leaving the viewer with no questions about perpetrator or motive, only with how the situation will be resolved. In
Alfred Bester's 1953 novel,
The Demolished Man, the reader learns in the first chapter that Ben Reich plans to murder a man; the rest of the novel is concerned with whether he will get away with it. The 1954 American film
Dragnet uses this format as the viewer witnesses the killing of a small-time hoodlum and watches as police led by
Sergeant Joe Friday work to apprehend the man's killer and the criminal leader at its heart. The short stories written by
William Edward "Roy" Vickers about the Department of Dead Ends are nearly all of the inverted type. They deal with the eccentric methods used by Inspector Rason, a detective in a fictional division of
Scotland Yard assigned to investigate
cold cases, to solve crimes where more conventional methods have failed. Several of the
Lord Peter Wimsey novels by
Dorothy Sayers, such as
Unnatural Death and
Strong Poison, come near to inclusion in this category. In both books, there is from the start only one real suspect, whose guilt is more or less taken for granted by the middle of the book and who indeed turns out to be the murderer. In both books—as in some other Sayers detective novels, including her last, ''
Busman's Honeymoon'', the mystery to be solved is mainly, "why did this person have any motive to commit this murder" and "how did he or she do it" (which makes this format more similar to the majority of police investigations). Also, the short story "
The Abominable History of the Man with Copper Fingers" had the villain not only discovered, but dead at the beginning. Lord Peter explained his investigation in detail, complete to the villain's stumbling into a vat of cyanide-and-copper-sulphate
electroplating solution. The term "howcatchem" was coined much later, by Philip MacDonald in 1963. It later became more widely used in the 1970s, most commonly to refer to the United States television series
Columbo, perhaps the best-known example of this genre. The 1989 theatrical play
Over My Dead Body, by Michael Sutton and Anthony Fingleton, depicts three elderly detective story writers committing a real-life
locked room murder in
Rube Goldbergian fashion. The audience is in on it every step of the way. In a variation of the typical inverted form, in this case the miscreants
want to be caught and made to pay their debt to society. In the 1990s, some episodes of
Diagnosis: Murder were presented in the inverted detective story format, usually when featuring a "big name" (or at least recognizable) guest star. TV shows
Monk,
Criminal Minds, and
Law & Order: Criminal Intent have frequently featured episodes structured as inverted detective stories, in which the viewer typically witnesses the killer commit the crime (during which the killer's identity is revealed to the audience), and then watches as the detectives try to solve it. (In at least one
Monk episode, they had to prove that a crime has been committed.) The shows have also used the
whodunit format at times. The British television crime series
Luther also made regular use of the inverted detective story structure. In the manga
Death Note, Light Yagami, Misa Amane, and Teru Mikami are villain protagonists, known to be killers from the start. The series chronicles L, Mello, and Near as they gradually uncover the truth. The TV show
Motive uses this format exclusively (hence the title). Each episode begins with scenes introducing and revealing the killer and the victim, and the rest of the episode shows the aftermath and the investigation before revealing the circumstances surrounding the murder. The first two seasons of the TV show
The Sinner can be considered an inverted detective story. In each case there are either multiple witnesses or incontrovertible physical evidence that the suspect committed the crime. Instead, the investigation involves teasing out the complicated backstory and motives for the crime. Both
Poker Face and
Elsbeth are modern takes on the genre. The visual novel series
Ace Attorney follows a mixture of this and the traditional whodunnit formula, depending on the episode. The first episode of each game usually shows the killer in a cutscene before the case begins, with later episodes shifting towards the killer's identity needing to be found. ==See also==