Description
Classic tales of mystery, terror, and suspense, including The Fall of the House of Usher–the inspiration for the Netflix series from Mike Flanagan, the director of The Haunting of Hill House and Midnight Mass!
This volume gathers together fourteen of Edgar Allan Poe’s richest and most influential tales, including: “The Pit and the Pendulum,” his reimagining of Inquisition tortures; “The Tell-Tale Heart,” an exploration of a murderer’s madness, which Stephen King called “the best tale of inside evil ever written”; “The Fall of the House of Usher,” Poe’s tour de force about a family doomed by a grim bloodline curse; and his pioneering detective stories, “The Purloined Letter” and “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” featuring a rational investigator with a poetic soul. Also included is Poe’s only full-length novel, Narrative of A. Gordon Pym. With an Introduction by Stephen Marloweand an Afterword by Regina Marler
Binding Type: Mass Market Paperbound
Contributors: Edgar Allan Poe,Stephen Marlowe (Introduction by),Regina Marler (Afterword by)
Published: 10/03/2006
Publisher: Signet Book
ISBN: 9780451530318
Pages: 432
Weight: 0.45lbs
Size: 1.10″ H x 6.80″ L x 4.25″ W
About the Author
Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1949) received a good education, first in England, then in a private school at Richmond, and later spent a year at the University of Virginia before he ran away to enlist in the army. Between 1827 and 1831, he published three volumes of poetry: Tamerlane (1827), Al Aaraaf (1829), and Poems (1831). From 1831 to 1835, he lived in Baltimore, where he began a lifelong struggle with poverty, disappointments in love, and addiction to alcohol. This last defect made it impossible for him to retain the editorial positions he later secured on magazines in Richmond, Philadelphia, and New York, despite the fact that the tales and book reviews he contributed greatly increased circulation. In May 1836, he married Virginia Clemm, a child of thirteen and the daughter of a paternal aunt. In April 1844, he moved his family to New York, and in January of the following year his literary fortunes turned when his poem “The Raven” appeared in the New York Evening News. Overnight, he became the most talked-about man of letters in America. Early in 1847 his wife died, and the year 1848 saw the end of two unhappy love affairs. He died on October 7, 1849.




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