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Hardcover The Tell-Tale Corpse Book

ISBN: 0345448421

ISBN13: 9780345448422

The Tell-Tale Corpse

(Book #4 in the Edgar Allan Poe Mystery Series)

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,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Hardcover

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Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Poe on the hunt

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.

entertaining historical who-done-it

Edgar Allan Poe is despondent because his wife, who is also his cousin, is very ill and in danger of dying. Poe's friend PT Barnum recommends he take her to see Dr. Farragat in Concord, Massachusetts. The physician uses homeopathic remedies concentrating on botanicals that provide amazing results. Barnum offers to fund the trip from New York if Poe will stop in Boston to pick up items from a killer who hung himself. Poe agrees and with his spouse Sissy stay at the home of the sister-in-law of a friend of Barnum, Mrs. Randall. While there Poe helps prove to the police that Elise Belton, whom he met at a show given by dentist Dr. Marston, was murdered instead of accidental drowned. In Concord, Dr. Farragut accepts Sissy as a patient, but his medicines are stolen by he believes his enemy Dr. Cassidy, who calls him a quack. Poe returns to Boston where he becomes embroiled in a series of murders that include the deaths of the dentist Dr. Marston, as well as Mrs. Randall, her maid, Ms Belton and daguerreotypist Herbert Ballinger. Poe assumes a serial killer is at work, but to prove it before returning to Concord is impossible. Harold Schechter portrays Poe as a person who believes in his own genius as he has a high opinion of himself. His love for his wife which means risking his life for her keeps Poe from being totally insufferable. There is some graphic violence in some scenes as Poe's tales are not for the faint of heart. The complexity of the murders and Poe's subsequent investigation make THE TELL-TALE CORPSE an entertaining historical who-done-it. Harriet Klausner
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