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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
What of the competing editions?,
By Ben Hodges (Atlanta) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Modern Library) (Hardcover)
I have an inexplicable attraction to the Modern Library hardbacks. Inevitably, if a Modern Library hardback version of some book that I want exists, I'll end up buying it. I really don't know why. Anyway, case and point: Edgar Allan Poe.The benefits of this edition are evident: a) All the short stories--yes, even the uproariously funny ones that most paperbacks leave out, as well as Poe's bizarre "hoaxes" and inexplicably contrived "articles" that don't really pass very well as stories b) All the poems--including poetry written in childhood as well as posthumously discovered c) ...and a couple of essays--most importantly, "The Rationale of Verse." However, the book still lacks most of Poe's criticism and other essays. I suggest you purchase Dover's little paperback _Edgar Allan Poe: Literary Theory and Criticism_ (kind of a "Greatest Hits" collection of Poe's critical work which, in reality, spans over 1500 pages) to complete your library. There you will find the great classic "The Philosophy of Composition" accompanied by dozens of ingenius (and at times ascerbic) reviews of books you may know from elsewhere. It's an invaluable resource. Moreover, the same Modern Library problems afflict this edition--thus, herein lies another reason I cannot explain why I must keep on buying and reading Modern Library hardbacks: A) There is no textual or intertextual editing, nor are there any critical footnotes. Moreover, there is no critical introduction by a Poe scholar. This bytes. B) There is no margin room. There never is in a Modern Library hardback. This gets really annoying when you're reading "The Fall of the House of Usher," and you're trying to tie together pieces of evidence (all part of Poe's perfect conceived "totality" of content) to form a of cohesive, critical interpretation of the story with about a centimeter of margin room in which to write! Your handwriting will quickly show itself illegible, and your hand mercilessly cramped. C) Modern Library hardbacks are customarily printed on cheap (although smooth and aesthetically pleasing) paper. Thus, when you write in your book, the ink is very likely to bleed over onto the converse page. Also quite annoying. However, however, however--I must not forget that the goal of Modern Library is not to print the best book possible, but the best _affordable_ book possible. And at $18.00, this 1000 page hardback is hard to beat. So, if you have the money, do actually buy _the best_ edition: the Library of America edition. ISBN 0940450186. It's over 1400 pages, is printed on paper that will last forever, and is edited by a prominent Poe scholar--but it's almost $40.00! But, more importantly for those of us on budgets: This edition is in direct competition with both the DoubleDay and Castle editions of Poe's collected stories and poems. Under no circumstances would I recommend the other two editions due to their typesettings. I know that may sound ridiculous, but a humane typesetting has a lot to do with the pleasure and utility that a book can and will proffer its reader. The print on the other two editions is inordinately overloaded (too much packed on each page) and serves to burden the eyes. For sooth, the Modern Library version is packed too--but it's a huge improvement on the other two editions. If you've got $40, get the Library of America edition. If you've only got $20, get this one.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A book I could never bring myself to get rid of,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Modern Library) (Hardcover)
I had always liked what I had read of Poe's work, but it had always been the more popular works, not enough to really feel his style of writing. This book, however, got me reading all of his writing and I immediately, and still increasingly, fell in love with Poe's style of writing, and most of all his humor and sarcasm, which can be quite subtle. My only regret is that I don't know latin, which would help the reader understand more of his side comments and quotes, French would be good too, but neither are necessary.
10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Poe is an underappreciated genius,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Modern Library) (Hardcover)
Poe has been overlooked by today's literary order, but the man was one of the finest American authors ever. His stories paved the way for other great and popular authors--everyone from Conan Doyle to Stephan King. This book is an outstanding collection and should be read not for its literary value (which is tremendous) but for the sheer fun of it.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Meditations On Horror In "Terrible Ascendancy",
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Modern Library) (Hardcover)
'Horror,' as it is broadly understood, is defined by two essential elements: the active presence of decay, some 'abnormal' manifestation of nature, or a combination of both.One hundred and fifty-seven years after his early death, Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849), who made horror the dominant theme of his creative work, remains the American master of the weird tale. Poe's work has had enormous worldwide influence: French poet Charles Baudelaire was an early champion and translator, Poe's 'William Wilson' (1839) haunts the pages of Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890), and several stories look presciently ahead to work of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung. The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allen Poe (1992), which also includes humorous pieces ('The Devil in the Belfry' is a hilarious tribute to the father of American literature, Washington Irving), detective fiction (Irving's 1838 story-cycle 'The Money-Diggers' stirs fluidly beneath 'The Gold Bug'), and early examples of what would come to be known as science fiction, brings together most of the author's important work. Two general narrator (or protagonist/character) types emerge. The first is meticulously rational, calm, and 'objective'--like Dupin, the amateur sleuth who coolly solves the mystery of 'The Murders in the Rue Morgue.' The second, best represented by Roderick Usher in 'The Fall of the House of Usher,' is psychically haunted, deeply subjective, acutely sensitive in every pore, and barely able to repress the hysteria--at best--simmering just beneath the surface of his consciousness. Both general types are isolated and obsessive in their own way--the first perhaps imagines he has found salvation by holding the world at a kind of hard cerebral remove, while the second surrenders his will in increments and sinks obliquely into emotional, spiritual, psychic, and physical fragmentation. The second type (found in 'The Fall of the House of Usher,' 'Berenice,' 'The Black Cat,' 'The Pit and the Pendulum,' and 'William Wilson,' among others) dominates and defines Poe's work. Poe occasionally offers readers a combination of both types, as in 'The Imp of the Perverse,' in which the narrator, after a lengthy, meditative, and 'objective' discourse on the self-destructive aspects of human nature, briefly tells his own story: compelled to commit a pointless murder, he then finds himself equally compelled to publicly confess it. Fatalism and perdition are key characteristics of the author's work: death may await everyone, but, in Poe, death impatiently reaches forward into men's lives, sickening, exhausting, and corrupting them, thus hastening fragile humanity's end. Poe's protagonists are once healthy, now dire, everymen surrounded on every side by hostile, malevolent, and destructive forces which dominate every plateau, division, and category of existence that man has methodically--and rather naively--mapped out. Human instinct proves to be 'red in tooth and claw'; the senses betray; the mind collapses; the borders and boundaries of civilization are violently breached; the natural world reveals a harsh, predatory, and incomprehensible face; physical laws prove unreliable; loving relationships sicken and fester; all agents of stability prove false and slip away. Most of Poe's work suggests that there is no escape for anyone (--"dead to the World, to Heaven, and to Hope!"), and, as several of the tales underscore, including 'The Fall of the House of Usher' and 'Ms. Found in a Bottle,' even the cessation of life may bring no solace for some. However, reprieves are possible: the narrator barbarically tortured by the Spanish Inquisition is freed by the arriving French army at the conclusion of 'The Pit and the Pendulum,' the sailor who experiences 'A Descent Into the Maelstrom' survives to tell of his ordeal, and the vengeful dwarves in 'Hop Frog' apparently escape at that story's conclusion. Remarkably, because of the skill with which he illustrates his view of man's utter lack of genuine choice or ability for self-determination, Poe manages to make most of his characters likeably human, despite their illnesses, eccentricities, and perversions. Though the tales team with toxic bloodlines, incestuous relationships, premature burials, rioting lunatics, marauding plagues, 'tormenting' doppelgangers, parasitic spirits of the dead, animated corpses, "ghoul-haunted woodlands," and a fair variety of additional supernatural tableaus, Poe remains is a remarkably rational, balanced, and economic storyteller, since the ultimate horror lies not in the external threat, but in the narrator's realization that what he is experiencing is the genuine nature of life itself. Poe's tales suggest that, if all of mankind lives within a perpetually collapsing, cannibalizing universe, the most one can hope for is that, in the present, it is collapsing on someone else.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
what a beautiful and well made book!,
By
This review is from: Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Hardcover)
This book is another release from the "Leather Bound Series" of books by Borders Group,Inc(aka Borders). It is a very well made hardcover volume(no dust jacket), and contains a thorough selection of Poe's poetry and short stories. For those who are interested in small(but important!) details, the book has the classic Harry Clarke illustrations throughout. They are reproduced very well, and are really a good complement to Poe's work. I would really recommend this book to Edgar Allan Poe's fans, both old and new. :D
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Quoth the raven,
This review is from: The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Modern Library) (Hardcover)
I've always had a liking for Edgar Allan Poe, with his tales of horror, mystery and suspense, done in the atmospheric prose of a master writer. Since I live close enough, I've even made some trips to his gravesite, a place that is always surrounded by a sense of sadness.Poe was a tormented genius who died young, under mysterious circumstances, and at the time of his death he wasn't deservingly popular. Certainly his work was not cute romances for the masses -- he explored the darkness of the human heart, love, satire, and the earliest whodunnit stories. And "Complete Stories and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe" brings together all of his poetry and writings in one book. Poe's fiction writings include short stories and novellas, which tend to be rather weird -- a treasure-hunt and a golden insect, a ship caught in a whirlpool, a hypnotized man talks about the universe, and stories of despair, madness, and occasionally beauty. There is also his trilogy of Monsieur C. Auguste Dupin stories, which were the first to feature a brilliant detective solving an impossible crime. Most people know about "The Raven" (which even has the Baltimore Ravens named after it) but Poe actually wrote a lot of poetry, most of which readers never heard of. Sometimes dark, or whimsical, or even both. "By a route obscure and lonely/Haunted by ill angels only/Where an Eidolon, named NIGHT/On a black throne reigns upright..." And, of course, the horror. This is what Poe is best known for, including such well-known stories as "The Fall Of The House Of Usher." But there are also lesser-known gems -- tales of a plague invading a party, being buried alive, a portrait that siphoned the life out of its subject, and a nightly visit to an Italian crypt leading to madness. Don't read "Complete Stories and Poems" all at once. It's too intense. It's better to soak it in a little at a time, so that you can get a better feel for the different kinds of writing that Poe did, and how he excelled at pretty much everything he put down on paper. Most great writers can't boast of that much. Poe's writing is what makes even his least story or poem come alive -- he brought a gothic, misty vibrancy to his stories, and could make his quiet dialogue seem utterly chilling (" "I have no name in the regions which I inhabit. I was mortal, but am fiend..."). It's not hard to see why he was an influence on authors such as Fyodor Dostoevsky, Oscar Wilde, Arthur Conan Doyle and Franz Kafka. "Complete Stories and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe" is a must-have for anyone with an appreciation for great literature and beautiful, dark writing.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wonderful Poetry,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Modern Library) (Hardcover)
All of Poe's work is in this volume. Until reading this from cover to cover, I was under the assumption that Poe's work consisted mainly of poetry. I was suprised to see that the vast majority of his writing is in the form of short stories. Each is quite unique, with clever, twisting endings. I particularly enjoyed the one novel, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym. Not the greatest piece, but interesting and well told. You will note that Poe's ship reaches Earth's equator at exactly midway through the novel. Poe thinks of these things, tiny little quirks. Hardback, well structured. A must for Poe lovers.
5.0 out of 5 stars
LONG LIVE EDGAR ALLAN POE!,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Modern Library) (Hardcover)
The Best American Author in history! With an intelligence far above the average (I bet) his works will grip you and make you discover imagination and the intense humming of evil minds like you've never done before...
5.0 out of 5 stars
THIS BOOK DEMONSTRATES THE GENIUS OF POE.,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Modern Library) (Hardcover)
EDGAR ALLAN POE WAS PROBABLY THE GREATEST AMERICAN AUTHOR WHO EVER LIVED. HIS WRITING SHOWS THAT AN AUTHOR HAS TO BE PRECISE WHILE CAPTURING HIS READERS INTEREST. HIS ANNABELLE LEE IS THE MOST ACHINGLY BEAUTIFUL POEM IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE.
5 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fantastic Poe!,
A Kid's Review
This review is from: The Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Modern Library) (Hardcover)
Poe is one of the best horror writers ever to have lived. I have read all of his works. Some of his best stories are The Fall of the House of Usher, The Masque of Red Death, The Black Cat, The Cask of Amontaiado, The Pit and the Pendelum, and The Tell-Tale Heart. His great poems include-The Raven and The Bells. Poe is a fantastic author, and his creepy tales of the dark side of life should be read over and over.
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Collected Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe (Wordsworth Special Editions) (Wordsworth Editions) by Edgar Allan Poe (Paperback - December 5, 2004)
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