Edgar Allan Poe

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Standard Name: Poe, Edgar Allan

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Theme or Topic Treated in Text Margaret Fuller
In her review Miss Barrett 's Poems she praised the English poet's majesty and her poetic vision but noted also her lack of economy and the stiffness of her verse.
“Dictionary of Literary Biography online”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Center-LRC.
59
She reviewed works by...
Textual Production Theodora Benson
As Elizabeth Jenkins told it, this began as an idea for a reportage novel illuminating the secrets of some particular métier. Jenkins hoped for something of morbid decadence reminiscent of Edgar Allan Poe , but...
Textual Production Sarah Lewis
The AmericanSarah Lewis published her second volume of poetry, Child of the Sea and Other Poems, which was heavily promoted by Edgar Allan Poe .
British Library Catalogue. http://explore.bl.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/search.do?dscnt=0&tab=local_tab&dstmp=1489778087340&vid=BLVU1&mode=Basic&fromLo.
Textual Production Sarah Lewis
SL began her writing career with contributions to The Family Magazine. Her first publication was said to be a poem which appeared around 1838, when she was just fourteen years old.
Mainiero, Lina, editor. American Women Writers. Vol. II, Unger.
2: 572
Walsh, Thomas. “Stella and Her Brooklyn Salon”. The Bookman, Vol.
56
, No. 5, pp. 578-83.
580
Textual Production Lettice Cooper
LC issued further biographies of eminent Victorians designed for young people: The Young Florence Nightingale, 1960, The Young Victoria, 1961, The Young Edgar Allan Poe, 1964, and A Hand Upon the Time...
Textual Production Daphne Du Maurier
DDM was fascinated by the history of Menabilly House, especially the story about workmen in the nineteenth century discovering a skeleton bricked up behind a wall—a tale calling to mind Poe 's short story...
Textual Production Elizabeth Goudge
Here Goudge appears in eclectic company: with, among others, Joan Aiken , Stephen King , and Edgar Allan Poe .
Textual Features D. H. Lawrence
Here Lawrence discusses such authors as Fenimore Cooper , Nathaniel Hawthorne , Herman Melville , and Edgar Allan Poe .
Textual Features Elizabeth Bishop
The volume reproduces in facsimile no fewer than sixteen drafts of one of EB 's best-known poems, One Art; Quinn's notes include snippets of rejection letters from the New Yorker.
White, Gillian. “Awful but Cheerful”. London Review of Books, pp. 8-10.
10
The passages...
Textual Features Elizabeth Barrett Browning
The title piece, A Drama of Exile, is the most ambitious. It visualises the consequences of the biblical Fall from paradise, since, as EBB writes in the preface (where she casts herself, too, as...
Textual Features Rebecca Harding Davis
She achieves this in Bits of Gossip in a series of scattered remembrances of my own generation which included vivid portraits of some of the most prominent men and women of the American nineteenth century...
Textual Features Sarah Josepha Hale
Editorial policy was to avoid anything controversial in mainstream politics. The magazine never mentioned the Civil War during the course of the conflict. In contrast to the Ladies' Magazine, the new one had a...
Reception Catharine Amy Dawson Scott
This novel received excellent reviews and in early 1920 reached the short-list of three English submissions for the Prix Femina Vie Heureuse, which however went in the end to Cicely Hamilton . In The Observer...
Reception Mary Stewart
This book was awarded the Mystery Writers of America Edgar Award (named after Edgar Allan Poe ) and stayed on the New York Times best-seller list for eight months.
“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Friedman, Lenemaja. Mary Stewart. Twayne Publishers.
xiv
Reception Sarah Lewis
The year after Records of the Heart appeared, SL and her husband became acquainted with Edgar Allan Poe . Facing poverty and illness, Poe reportedly welcomed their kindness, friendship, and most importantly, their generosity. In...

Timeline

About June 1827: Writing as a Bostonian, Edgar Allan Poe published...

Writing climate item

About June 1827

Writing as a Bostonian, Edgar Allan Poe published his first volume of poetry, Tamerlane and Other Poems, at his own expense.

About April 1831: Edgar Allan Poe's third volume of verse was...

Writing climate item

About April 1831

Edgar Allan Poe 's third volume of verse was entitled Poems; it included the well-known piece To Helen.

November 1839: Edgar Allan Poe published Tales of the Grotesque...

Writing climate item

November 1839

Edgar Allan Poe published Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque, which included The Fall of the House of Usher.

1 April 1841: Graham's Magazine, published in Philadelphia...

Writing climate item

1 April 1841

Graham's Magazine, published in Philadelphia (which had Edgar Allan Poe on its staff and published much of his work), carried his The Murders in the Rue Morgue, often called the first detectivestory.

1843: Edgar Allan Poe published The Pit and the...

Writing climate item

1843

Edgar Allan Poe published The Pit and the Pendulum, whose suspense and threatened horror have made it one of his best-known stories.

19 November 1845: Edgar Allan Poe published The Raven and Other...

Writing climate item

19 November 1845

Edgar Allan Poe published The Raven and Other Poems.

1846: Edgar Allan Poe published The Philosophy...

Writing climate item

1846

Edgar Allan Poe published The Philosophy of Composition.

December 1848: Edgar Allan Poe published The Poetic Principle...

Writing climate item

December 1848

Edgar Allan Poe published The Poetic Principle in The Southern Literary Messenger after presenting it as a successful public lecture in Providence earlier in December.

9 October 1849: Rufus Griswold (later editor and publicist...

Writing climate item

9 October 1849

Rufus Griswold (later editor and publicist of Edgar Allan Poe ) published Poe's now-famous poemAnnabel Lee in the New York Daily Tribune in an obituary two days after the author's mysterious death.

Texts

Poe, Edgar Allan. “The Philosophy of Composition”. Selections from the Critical Writings of Edgar Allan Poe, edited by Frederick Clarke Prescott and Frederick Clarke Prescott, Gordian Press, 1981, pp. 150-66.
Poe, Edgar Allan. The Works of Edgar Allan Poe. Editors Stedman, Edmund Clarence and George Edward Woodberry, Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1895.