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List Price: $12.99Price: $12.00 You Save: $0.99 ( 8%)Prices subject to change.
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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.3
EAN: 9780785814535
ISBN: 0785814531
Label: Castle Books
Manufacturer: Castle Books
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 842
Publication Date: November 29, 2009
Publisher: Castle Books
Studio: Castle Books
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: This collection of 73 short stories and 48 poems includes such masterpieces as The Fall of the House of Usher, The Purloined Letter, The Tell-Tale Heart, The Raven, and Murders in the Rue Morgue.
Average Rating: 
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I read this book to get inside the head of Edgar Allan Poe. It was like eating corn chips, one story leads to another. Especially enjoyed the Mask of the Red Death and Eleonora. What is amazing is the extensive vocabulary of this master writer. This is a great book to have for those stormy winter nights with your fireplace crackling.
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one of the better collections of Poe's work. Havent had a problem with the binding that tends to happen with the bigger books. I suggest getting this over the other copies available. Great addition to any book shelf and its also a great source of "alternative" literature for my 8yo neice who is tired of reading about "hank the cowdog."
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This is great for any Poe fan, has his complete works. My kids love it when I read the stories from it.
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I am the Poe novice. I've heard much about him, and finally decided to get a copy of his complete works. Before I begin, I am a fan of, and quite capable of digesting 19th century literature. Furthermore, those buying this book for a Poe fan, or for themselves (already being a fan) will find a great deal for the money. A sound bargain.
However, for the Poe novice, one who is merely curious about this author of great renown, I offer this review of the writer himself.
A curious ... Read More
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Edgar Allan Poe was more than another great writer. He was the ferryman to a world where all earthly norms fall away, and sense becomes nonsense. In his introduction to this volume, Wilbur Scott describes the goal of Poe's poetry being "to move the reader from the quotidian world of fact and tedium into a transcendent world of supernal loveliness."
Same with many of his tales, also produced here, with this important addendum: Sometimes the world Poe takes you do is not any fancy land at all; ... Read More
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