The Fall of the House of Usher

Author: Edgar Allan Poe

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The Raven

Edgar Allan Poe

The Raven is a narrative poem written by Edgar Allan Poe and his most famous poetic composition. It was first published in January 1845.

Its musicality, stylized language and supernatural atmosphere are remarkable. It tells of the mysterious visit of a talking raven to the house of a grieving lover and the slow descent into madness of the latter.

It is one of his best known poems and its iconography has been copied and paid homage to on numerous occasions, both in other books and poems and in television programs or films.

The Tell-Tale Heart

Edgar Allan Poe

In this story Edgar Allan Poe explores the doom of human beings by the gratuitous and irrational hatred that is allowed to grow in the hearts of murderers.

The narrator is recounting his performance until he explains his own arrest by the officers and the hatred he felt growing for an old man and his eye.

First published in the literary journal The Pioneer in January 1843 Poe later republished it in his newspaper The Broadway Journal in its August 23, 1845 edition. It is one of his best-known horror stories.

The Murders in the Rue Morgue

Edgar Allan Poe

XIX Century. The barbaric murder of two women, mother and daughter, takes place in an apartment in a populous street in Paris. The first investigations do not give any result, evidencing the impotence of the police to clarify the facts.

Finally, an amateur detective, M. Dupin, takes charge of the matter and, after intense and brilliant investigation, offers an extraordinary explanation.

The Murders in the Rue Morgue, is one of the most important detective stories of Edgar Allan Poe and with which he would lay the foundations of much of the black and criminal genre born in the decades following its publication.

The Pit and the Pendulum

Edgar Allan Poe

The narrator/protagonist begins the story, already exhausted, in a dark cell where the Spanish Inquisition locks up the people it condemns, and where the torture it applies consists of loneliness, abandonment, darkness, cold and hunger.

The tortured protagonist is almost entirely tied up and experiments the anguish of knowing his next death as a pendulum descends towards him. After measuring the size of his cell, he discovers a deep pit with water located in the center of the site.

He is sure that he will be killed by the knife at the end of that pendulum, and he entertains himself with the trajectory of the object, but then an idea occurs to him, remembering that he has at his disposal some meat, food that he shared with the rats.

The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket

Edgar Allan Poe

The protagonist, Arthur Gordon Pym, clandestinely embarks on the whaling ship Grampus. After many experiences and misfortunes (mutinies, shipwrecks, cannibalism, wars with natives) that put his life at risk, he goes into the marvelous landscapes of the Antarctic seas, until he suffers an overwhelming revelation with which the story ends.

The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym is one of the most controversial, strange and enigmatic works of its author, being among the excellent poetic titles with a marine theme, together with Manuscript Found in a Bottle, The Oblong Box and A Descent into Maelström.

In this work, Poe, on board the Grampus, takes those who read him on the wings of his wild imagination to mental and literary regions he has never trodden before, hence the absorbing interest shown in the piece by surrealist writers and literary psychoanalysts of all walks of life.