poe
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Tackling Poe: The Complete Works, Part 7
And here we are for the seventh installment of Tackling Poe: The Complete Works. This segment will finally conclude all of Poe’s short stories. As always, feel free to check out my Dictionary of Purple Prose to see new words I’ve adopted from his texts, or use any of the free resources linked below to…
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Tackling Poe: The Complete Works, Part 6
I’m finally back after a very extended absence from reading this collection. (Shame on me!) I suffered a bit of burn-out halfway through this segment’s offerings, but finally recovered enough to get back to it. I’ve planned out the rest of the blog series now. Tackling Poe: The Complete Works is going to be a…
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Tackling Poe: The Complete Works, Part 5
The fifth installment of Tackling Poe: The Complete Works is going to be starting strong, with The Tell-Tale Heart. What’s been your favorite story so far? It’d be a hard choice for me; probably either The Pit and the Pendulum or The Fall of the House of Usher. If I were pressed to choose one that isn’t considered…
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Tackling Poe: The Complete Works, Part 4
Things are getting exciting in this fourth installment of Tackling Poe: The Complete Works. Edgar Allan Poe is best known for his Gothic horror, even if it wasn’t perhaps his favorite genre to write. I’m particularly looking forward to writing this post, as The Pit and Pendulum was the very first Poe story I read,…
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Tackling Poe: The Complete Works, Part 3
And here we are for the third installment of Tackling Poe: The Complete Works. I’ve been having a lot of fun doing this, as I’m finding out so much about this author I greatly admire. Something I haven’t been adding to my reviews are all the fun words that Poe uses in his works. There…
Dupin, edgar allan poe, genies, hoax, hypnosis, Mesmeric Revelation, Murders in the Rue Morgue, poe, Purloined Letter, Silence – A Fable, The Black Cat, The Facts of the Case of M. Valdemar, The Fall of the House of Usher, The Mystery of Marie Rogêt, The Purloined Letter, The Thousand-and-Second Tale of Scheherazade, Von Kempelen and His Discovery
