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Loading... The Tell-Tale Heart {story} (1843)by Edgar Allan Poe
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I am a huge fan of Poe, and I have read "The Tell-Tale Heart" several times. This time, reading the Creative Classic Series version, I still enjoyed the story. However, with all due respect for Byron Glaser's talent, I did not feel that the illustrations particularly added to the story experience. They did, however, make the story a little more fun for the child reader without distracting from the power of the text itself. A short biography of Edgar Allan Poe appears at the end, geared specifically toward young readers. If you want to introduce your child to Poe's short stories, this might be the book to get. ( ) One of my favourite short stories! What a build-up and what a climax! Read this ages ago but still haven't forgotten the impact. The story is in the public domain, so you can read it online for free. Here's one such link: https://americanenglish.state.gov/files/ae/resource_files/the_tell-tale_heart_0.... Enjoy! Poe does the macabre with such mastery and finesse, and The Tell Tale Heart is one of his best efforts. In a very few pages, Poe takes us into the mind of a madman, through the act of murder, and into the horror of the beating heart of a dead man. I was very pleased with revisiting this tale. I will now revisit the rest of Poe's works. A master of the Gothic short story, this tale of delusion and madness makes for great reading. Often used in conjunction with other tales for exploring themes of loneliness, psychological understanding, dark and gloomy settings, memory, loss, suffering, and death. Many of Poe's stories have a connection to his own life and paint the picture of the writer as a sad and lonely man lost amidst ghosts of his past. The Tell-Tale Heart focuses on a young man who is a caretaker of an older gentleman. The older gentleman has two different eyes (perhaps from age or disease) one of which is described as "vulture-like" by the narrator. The young man grows obsessed with this eye and cannot stand it. He commits an act against the old man and spends much of the tale protesting to authorities about how sane he is while describing the cold, calculated, and methodical things he did. In the end, the young man is more driven mad by his own psychosis than anything else. Recommended for readers as young as middle-grades (6-8). **All thoughts and opinions are my own.** no reviews | add a review
Belongs to Publisher SeriesIs contained inThe Fall of the House of Usher and Other Writings: Poems, Tales, Essays, and Reviews (Penguin Classics) by Edgar Allan Poe 50 beroemde griezelverhalen by Benjamin Jessurun Lobo (indirect) The Works of Edgar Allen Poe in One Volume: Poems, Tales, Essays, Criticisms with New Notes by Edgar Allan Poe The Best Known Works of Edgar Allan Poe in One Volume: Poems, Tales, Essays, Criticisms by Edgar Allan Poe The Complete Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe with Selections from His Critical Writings by Edgar Allan Poe The Complete Stories (Everyman's Library) by Edgar Allan Poe (indirect) Tales of Terror and Fantasy: Ten Stories from "Tales of Mystery and Imagination (Children's Illustrated Classics) by Edgar Allan Poe The annotated tales of Edgar Allan Poe edited with an introduction, notes, and a bibliography by Edgar Allan Poe Masters of Horror & Suspense (The Interlopers The Specter The Tell-Tale Heart The Cask of Amontillado) by Uncredited The Raven and the Monkey's Paw: Classics of Horror and Suspense from the Modern Library by Uncredited The Best of Poe: The Tell-Tale Heart, The Raven, The Cask of Amontillado, and 30 Others by Edgar Allan Poe Edgar Allan Poe: Collected Stories and Poems (Collector's Library Editions) by Edgar Allan Poe (indirect) Panik. Gruselgeschichten aus England und Amerika von R. L. Stevenson bis Ernest Hemingway by Mary Hottinger (indirect) Phantoms and Fantasies by Rudyard Kipling (indirect) The Edge of the Chair: A Superlative Collection, Some Fact, Some Fiction, All Suspense by Joan Kahn (indirect) Has the adaptationThe Graphic Canon, Vol. 2: From "Kubla Khan" to the Brontë Sisters to The Picture of Dorian Gray by Russ Kick The Graphic Canon of Crime & Mystery, Vol. 2: From Salome to Edgar Allan Poe to The Silence of the Lambs by Russ Kick Is parodied inHas as a commentary on the textHas as a student's study guideNotable Lists
First published in an 1843 edition of The Pioneer, The Tell-Tale Heart is one of Poe's best-known stories. In it, an unreliable narrator is increasingly troubled by the clouded eye of the old man he lives with. Similar to The Black Cat, The Tell-Tale Heart focuses on the effects of mental instability, crime, and guilt. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.3Literature American literature in English American fiction in English Middle 19th Century 1830-1861LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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