Why should you read Edgar Allan Poe Scott Peeples

A high forehead topped
by disheveled black hair,

a sickly pallor,

and a look of deep intelligence
and deeper exhaustion

in his dark, sunken eyes.

Edgar Allan Poe’s image
is not just instantly recognizable –

it’s perfectly suited to his reputation.

From the prisoner strapped
under a descending pendulum blade,

to a raven who refuses
to leave the narrator’s chamber,

Poe’s macabre and innovative stories
of gothic horror

have left a timeless mark on literature.

But just what is it that makes
Edgar Allan Poe

one of the greatest American authors?

After all, horror was a popular
genre of the period,

with many practitioners.

Yet Poe stood out thanks to his
careful attention to form and style.

As a literary critic,

he identified two cardinal rules
for the short story form:

it must be short enough
to read in one sitting,

and every word
must contribute to its purpose.

By mastering these rules,

Poe commands the reader’s attention

and rewards them with an intense
and singular experience –

what Poe called the unity of effect.

Though often frightening,
this effect goes far beyond fear.

Poe’s stories use violence and horror
to explore the paradoxes and mysteries

of love,

grief,

and guilt,

while resisting simple interpretations
or clear moral messages.

And while they often hint
at supernatural elements,

the true darkness they explore
is the human mind

and its propensity for self-destruction.

In “The Tell-Tale Heart,”
a ghastly murder

is juxtaposed with the killer’s
tender empathy towards the victim –

a connection that soon
returns to haunt him.

The title character of “Ligeia”
returns from the dead

through the corpse
of her husband’s second wife –

or at least the opium-addicted
narrator thinks she does.

And when the protagonist
of “William Wilson”

violently confronts a man
he believes has been following him,

he might just be staring
at his own image in a mirror.

Through his pioneering use
of unreliable narrators,

Poe turns readers into active participants

who must decide when a storyteller
might be misinterpreting

or even lying about the events
they’re relating.

Although he’s best known
for his short horror stories,

Poe was actually one of the most versatile

and experimental writers
of the nineteenth century.

He invented the detective story
as we know it,

with “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,”

followed by “The Mystery of Marie Roget”

and “The Purloined Letter.”

All three feature
the original armchair detective,

C. Auguste Dupin,

who uses his genius and unusual powers
of observation and deduction

to solve crimes that baffle the police.

Poe also wrote satires of social
and literary trends,

and hoaxes that in some cases
anticipated science fiction.

Those included an account of
a balloon voyage to the moon,

and a report of a dying patient
put into a hypnotic trance

so he could speak from the other side.

Poe even wrote an adventure novel
about a voyage to the South Pole

and a treatise on astrophysics,

all while he worked as an editor,

producing hundreds of pages
of book reviews and literary theory.

An appreciation of Poe’s career
wouldn’t be complete without his poetry:

haunting and hypnotic.

His best-known poems are songs of grief,
or in his words,

“mournful and never-ending remembrance.”

“The Raven,” in which the speaker
projects his grief onto a bird

who merely repeats a single sound,

made Poe famous.

But despite his literary success,

Poe lived in poverty
throughout his career,

and his personal life was often
as dark as his writing.

He was haunted by the loss of his mother
and his wife,

who both died of tuberculosis
at the age of 24.

Poe struggled with alcoholism

and frequently antagonized
other popular writers.

Much of his fame came from posthumous –
and very loose – adaptations of his work.

And yet, if he could’ve known
how much pleasure and inspiration

his writing would bring to generations
of readers and writers alike,

perhaps it may have brought
a smile to that famously brooding visage.

高高的额头上
披着凌乱的黑发

,苍白得病态,

深沉的深邃眼眸中透着深邃的智慧
和更深的

疲惫。

埃德加·爱伦·坡的
形象不仅让人一眼就能认出来——

它非常适合他的声誉。

从被绑
在下降的钟摆刀片下的

囚犯,到
拒绝离开叙述者房间的乌鸦,

坡的令人毛骨悚然和创新
的哥特式恐怖故事

在文学上留下了永恒的印记。

但究竟是什么让
埃德加·爱伦·坡

成为美国最伟大的作家之一?

毕竟,恐怖
是那个时代的流行类型,

有很多从业者。

然而,坡因
对形式和风格的认真关注而脱颖而出。

作为一名文学评论家,

他确定
了短篇小说形式的两个基本规则:

它必须足够短,
可以一口气读完,

并且每个单词都
必须有助于其目的。

通过掌握这些规则,

坡可以吸引读者的注意力

,并以一种强烈
而独特的体验来奖励他们

——坡称之为效果的统一。

虽然经常令人恐惧,但
这种影响远远超出了恐惧。

坡的故事使用暴力和恐怖
来探索

爱、

悲伤

和内疚的悖论和奥秘,

同时抵制简单的解释
或明确的道德信息。

虽然他们经常
暗示超自然元素,

但他们探索的真正黑暗
是人类的思想

及其自我毁灭的倾向。

在“The Tell-Tale Heart”中,
一场可怕的

谋杀与凶手
对受害者的温柔同情并列 -

这种联系很快
又困扰着他。

“Ligeia”的主角

通过
她丈夫的第二任妻子的尸体从死里复活——

或者至少鸦片成瘾的
叙述者认为她是这样。

而当
“威廉·威尔逊”的主人公

与一个
他认为一直在跟踪他的人激烈对抗时,

他可能只是
在盯着镜子里的自己的形象。

通过他开创性地
使用不可靠的叙述者,

坡将读者变成了积极的参与者

,他们必须决定什么时候讲故事的人
可能会误解

甚至撒谎
他们所涉及的事件。

尽管坡以
短篇恐怖小说而闻名,但

他实际上是 19 世纪最全面

、最具实验性的作家
之一。

他发明了
我们所知道的侦探故事

,“莫格街谋杀案”,

随后是“玛丽·罗杰之谜”

和“被盗的信”。

三人都
以最初的扶手椅侦探

C. Auguste Dupin 为主角,

他利用自己的天才和不同寻常
的观察和推理能力

来解决令警察感到困惑的罪行。

坡还写了对社会
和文学趋势的讽刺,

以及在某些情况下
预示科幻小说的恶作剧。

其中包括
对登月的气球航行的描述,

以及关于一名垂死的病人进入催眠状态的报告,

以便他可以从另一边说话。

坡甚至写了一本
关于南极航行的冒险小说

和一篇关于天体物理学的论文

,同时他还是一名编辑,

撰写了数百页
的书评和文学理论。

如果没有他的诗歌,对坡的职业生涯的欣赏
就不会完整:

令人难以忘怀和催眠。

他最著名的诗歌是悲伤的歌曲,
或者用他的话来说,是

“悲哀而永无止境的回忆”。

“乌鸦”中,演讲者
将他的悲伤投射到一只

只重复一个声音的鸟身上,这

让坡成名。

但是,尽管他在文学上取得了成功,但

坡在整个职业生涯中都生活在贫困之中

,他的个人生活往往
与他的写作一样黑暗。

他的母亲
和妻子


在 24 岁时死于肺结核,这让他心烦

意乱。坡与酗酒作斗争,

并经常与
其他受欢迎的作家为敌。

他的大部分名声来自他死后的——
而且非常松散——对他作品的改编。

然而,如果他能知道

他的作品会给一代又一代
的读者和作家带来多少乐趣和灵感,

也许它可能会给
那张著名的沉思脸庞带来微笑。