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The Tell-Tale Corpse: An Edgar Allan Poe Mystery (Edgar Allan Poe Mysteries)
 
 
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The Tell-Tale Corpse: An Edgar Allan Poe Mystery (Edgar Allan Poe Mysteries) [Hardcover]

Harold Schechter (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Edgar Allan Poe Mysteries March 7, 2006
Ever since childhood, Edgar Allan Poe has seen things that are not there, heard voices others cannot and felt utterly at home in the realm of human darkness. In Harold Schechter’s intriguing, suspenseful, and delightfully wicked mystery series, Poe makes the perfect hero to unravel cases of the murderous and the macabre.

The Tell-Tale Corpse begins as Poe pays a visit to his old friend P. T. Barnum, who implores the wordsmith to travel to Boston to secure for Poe’s wife an urgent medical cure–and to acquire some particularly garish crime-scene evidence for Barnum’s popular cabinet of curiosities, the so-called American Museum. The crime in question is the recent butchery of a beautiful young shopgirl. Once in Boston, Poe makes an immediate deduction: The sensational murder is only one in a string of inexplicable killings–the center of a single, shadowy pool of deceit and ghoulish depravity.

Several deaths later, Poe finds himself leading a frantic investigation, with the assistance of a highly unusual girl named Louisa May Alcott, who has literary ambitions of her own–and whose innocence belies her own fascination with the dark side. As his wife’s health falters and a city panics, Poe pursues a strange circle of suspects. He must now see what others cannot: the invisible bonds that tie together seemingly unrelated cases–and the truth that lies behind a serial murderer’s ghastly disguise.

From a cameo by the narcoleptic Henry David Thoreau to a charming portrait of the four Alcott sisters at home in Concord, The Tell-Tale Corpse brings to life nineteenth-century New York and Boston and a world of intellectuals, charlatans, discoverers, dupes, daguerreotypists, and amateur morticians. As Poe comes closer to unraveling the fiendish riddle, the poet must admit at last that he is up against a fellow genius–a genius not of words but of death.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

In the third Edgar Allan Poe mystery, set in late 1845, the amateur sleuth (and would-be literary giant) takes a trip to Massachusetts, looking for a cure for his wife's illness. Naturally, he finds mayhem and murder--a series of murders, in fact, mind-boggling in their deviousness. Aided by a plucky sidekick, one Louisa May Alcott (before she wrote Little Women),Poe pieces together the clues and exposes a criminal mastermind. Schechter, who made his bones writing true crime, clearly has a solid grasp of evil's psychological underpinnings. The Poe novels are gimmicky, to be sure, like any mystery where the protagonist is a famous person, but Schechter makes sure the stories don't feel gimmicky. Poe, who narrates the novel, doesn't seem like a pastiche, and the plot itself is as well constructed as any more conventional mystery. This series could be around for a while. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

Praise for Harold Schechter and The Mask of Red Death

“One couldn’t ask for a more bustling and colorful setting than mid-nineteenth-century New York. . . . Rip-snorting good fun.”
–Minneapolis Star Tribune

“The ingenious twists of plot and its several surprises never let up.”
–The Providence Journal

“Perilous adventures and narrow escapes proliferate.”
–Kirkus Reviews

“Caleb Carr and Tom Holland are going to have some competition for turf in the land of historical literary crime fiction.”
–The Boston Book Review, on Nevermore

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books (March 7, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345448421
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345448422
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 1.2 x 9.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,650,333 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Harold Schechter is a professor of American literature and culture. Renowned for his true-crime writing, he is the author of the nonfiction books Fatal, Fiend, Bestial, Deviant, Deranged, Depraved, and, with David Everitt, The A to Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. He is also the author of Nevermore and The Hum Bug, the acclaimed historical novels featuring Edgar Allan Poe. He lives in New York State.

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars The Latest In a Fine Mystery Series, August 31, 2010
This review is from: The Tell-Tale Corpse: An Edgar Allan Poe Mystery (Edgar Allan Poe Mysteries) (Hardcover)
As an Edgar Allan Poe fan, I have found this murder mystery series featuring "The Raven" as crime-solving hero quite enjoyable. Schechter "channels" him in a way that is both tongue-in-cheek and weirdly respectful. Oddly, he is the only fiction writer I have seen to date that actually makes Poe sympathetic, even endearing.

The book is quite well-written, and the plot complicated and involving. I'd prefer the crimes were a little less gruesome, but perhaps that's just me. Also, Poe himself would love what Schechter does to the Transcendentalists. I felt the main weakness of the book was the Alcott family. "Marmee" and her daughters (including Louisa May) come off as sickly-sweet to the point of being tiresome. Still, that was a minor flaw in an otherwise entertaining book.

I did notice one dark twist to the book's finale that Schecter seems to have overlooked or deliberately ignored. Without (hopefully) giving away too much about the ending, I noted that Poe, by solving the case, essentially unwittingly did great harm to the wife he was so desperate to protect. It puzzled me that the author did not really address that conundrum.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Another very good mystery, July 8, 2010
By 
John Capps (Gastonia, NC United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Tell-Tale Corpse: An Edgar Allan Poe Mystery (Edgar Allan Poe Mysteries) (Hardcover)
This was the second book I've read in the Edgar Allen Poe mystery series (you, I find, have to read them in order). This is book I felt was very good, well-written in the voice of the great writer. I feel the author does a great job in "channeling" EAP without resulting in caricature. This book also features in a supporting role PT Barnum, who also appeared in a prior book of the series I read, and it was great to see this amazing character again. However, he is not the only famous name to appear, most surprising is Louisa May Alcott as a precocious young writer and adventurer. I eagerly look forward to reading more in this series.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Poe on the hunt, November 8, 2007
By 
Gerald R. Hibbs "gerbear" (Edmond, Oklahoma United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Tell-Tale Corpse: An Edgar Allan Poe Mystery (Edgar Allan Poe Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Author Schechter writes a series of books using Edgar Allan Poe as his detective based on the historical fact that Poe is often credited as being the first true detective. And this reads like a true detective story. Just when you think you (and Poe) have it figured out something happens to prove you (and Poe) wrong. Entertaining story, easy read for the most part but not for the squeamish. Poe always has help from some famous person. In this case it is Louisa May Alcott, authoress of "Little Women." It is interesting to see her involved in this kind of story, so different from what she wrote as is usually the case with the possible exception of P.T. Barnum, his old friend.
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