Tag Archives: Edgar Allan Poe

In Search of Edgar Allan Poe (PBS on Kanopy)

19 Feb

Edgar Allan Poe is much more than the gloomy poet of The Raven or the macabre short story teller of The Tell-Tale Heart. The PBS documentary on Kanopy, In Search of Edgar Allan Poe, stylizes and weaves a much more eye-opening (and I’d say heartbreaking) ode to one of American Literature’s greatest.

Image featuring a portrait of Edgar Allan Poe against a dark background with a full moon and a silhouetted raven perched on a branch. The text reads “In Search of Edgar Allan Poe.”

It’s two 90-minute parts, exploring Poe’s imaginative brilliance, his inspiring resilience, and his undying ambition through life-long hardship.

More Than the Macabre

Poe, of course, is rightfully celebrated as the inaugural king of haunting tales. This special taught me that he was also one of the most innovative writers in our country’s history – before Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes or Agatha Christie’s Poirot, Poe trailblazed the detective story with The Murders in the Rue Morgue. Before Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, he experimented with science fiction through stories like The Balloon Hoax. And his fascination with cryptology in The Gold-Bug helped inspire Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle acknowledged Poe’s influence in his first Sherlock Holmes story – Watson compares Holmes to Poe’s detective Dupin.

The closing credits roll like a who’s who of authors influenced by Poe. 

Poe’s Unity of Effect is also explored, the theory that every word, every line, every image in a short story keeps the reader grounded in one emotion – fear, grief, dread, isolation, etc. And that stories at their full potential should be enjoyed in one sitting. 

The documentary also confronts many misconceptions, particularly about Poe’s personal life and alcoholism. He had demons and addictions. There’s no denying that. It’s tragic and heartbreaking, yet the series unmasks a man marked by early loss, financial struggle, and deep devotion to his ailing wife – massive anxieties and demonic possessions all intermingling with his fascination for the writing craft.

And while Baltimore may claim him as one of their own, the series reminds us that Poe also belongs to more than just Baltimore. In Philadelphia, where he wrote The Tell-Tale Heart and grew his dream of starting a literary journal, and in New York City, where he penned The Raven, he lived out his last days in a cottage with his ailing wife in the Bronx. Here, he wrote his romantic ode to her, Annabel Lee (You can visit the cottage for tours.)  

I came away both haunted and in awe of this literary genius and how much modern storytelling has this man’s dark yet imaginative mind to thank. 

Watch now on Kanopy: In Search of Edgar Allan Poe (PBS)  (Free with your library card)

Comment below your thoughts once you’ve had a watch.

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Written by:
Sean Willey
Information and Digital Services Assistant

Hestor Fox’s Gothic Mysteries: The Witch of Pale Harbor, The Witch of Willow Hall, and The Orphan of Cemetery Hill

10 Dec

Hestor Fox is now known for her lush, historical fantasies. But, before that? Gothic mysteries. The former museum curator and historical archaeologist built her career on tales woven through the macabre. Let me point to the original three that launched her career – The Witch of Pale Harbor, The Witch of Willow Hall, and Orphan of Cemetery Hill. These are all excellent novels that express the dreaded and dreary themes of the Gothic genre alongside the macabre tones of Edgar Allan Poe. 

  1. The Witch of Pale Harbor: Psychological suspense mixed with the foreboding of an isolated New England town in the 1830s. Fox captured me with her spirited language and vivid imagery – from one of the very first scenes when the protagonist finds himself exploring his new parish. The sense of claustrophobia intensifies as suspicion grows around a reclusive governess. Small-town judgment and hysteria blend well here.
  2. The Witch of Willow Hall: Critically, the best-rated of her original three gothic stories. Three sisters flee scandal and take refuge in their family’s retreat, Willow Hall. Guess what? It’s haunted with a terrible curse that sustains the sisters with palpable dread and a psychological toll that bellows heavy like a grandfather clock. 
  3. The Orphan of Cemetery Hill: Rich with the Victorians’ death obsession and an intense psychological terror mystery. We move on to Boston in the 1840s. What could possibly plague someone who works as a medium and facilitates seances? It’s all about helping others…until someone from her past appears as a result of this activity. The protagonist must now confront secrets of her own. What transpires is a confrontation of the dark secrets of her own identity.

Eerie whispers of a classic Gothic tale mixed with atmospherically convoluted moral struggles that thrust characters into conundrums and challenge their own code – that’s what you get here.

Which novel will you be checking out? Each title is linked to their BCCLS page, so go ahead and make your reservation. 

Post a pic and tag @hobokenlibrary on Instagram once you get your copy from the library.

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Written by:
Sean Willey
Information and Digital Services Assistant