First Read Edgar Allen Poe
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First Read Edgar Allen Poe
- Nathrad Sheare
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If you have any more specific questions, sjschleis, I'd be happy to help!
-Edgar Allan Poe
- ciewilder
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- H0LD0Nthere
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I think there is a connection between "The Tell-Tale Heart" and "The Raven." Namely, in both cases the narrator IS his own doom. In "The Tell-Tale Heart," he would not have been caught for the murder, but his own near-crazy obsession forces him to reveal it (sorry if no spoilers are allowed). In "The Raven," it's just a bird that has learned only one word from humans: "Nevermore." The narrator knows this. He could ask it any question that he liked, and it would still answer "nevermore." But because of the way his mind is working, he keeps asking it questions about Lenore, whether he will ever see her again, etc. He's not doing it on purpose, of course, or not completely. But he is bouncing off the raven's verbal habit to create his own meaning. Every time the raven repeats the only line it knows, the narrator has a harder and harder time NOT viewing it as an oracle. As Nathrad Sheare says, it's his own guilt and obsession ... but he is using the raven to create the confirmation that he needs -- or fears.
Actually I think this is a great example of how both oracles and ghost stories can actually work. At first, we are just amusing ourselves, "just to see" if there is anything in it, and we are in control of the situation, but the longer we interact with the entity, the less we realize that we are in control. Reminds me of an expose by a carnival fortune-teller I read. She would basically read peoples' verbal and nonverbal cues, then do her best to predict what they were evidently hoping for, or "reveal" what they were evidently already worried about. And I have seen at least one false prophet do the same thing. But I digress.
Gotta say, I'm not completely comfortable with Edgar Allen Poe's constant intertwining of love and morbidity. I don't find it romantic. But, I digress again.
The relentless rhythm of The Raven really gives you a sense that you are going crazy/obsessed with the narrator.
- Katereads
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- H0LD0Nthere
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Kate, I once went to a drama competition where one contestant had chosen for his monologue "The Tell-Tale Heart." He would put on his specs as he got into his character, give this creepy little grin, shake his head and say, "Yet still you think me mad." It was very effective!Katereads wrote:I have always enjoyed The Tell Tale Heart. I enjoy the vivid imagery that Poe creates in this story. I love the tension and how I feel when I am able to imagine how the main character feels when the event is unfolding. This doesn't happen for me often, and when it does I really enjoy the literature.
- Nathrad Sheare
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-Edgar Allan Poe
- JessiFox
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- PashaRu
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Unless you're a die-hard Poe fan, I would recommend skipping his only novel, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket. It's meandering and rather tedious, and shows that the short story was a much better forum for him.
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