WELCOME

This blog serves the readers of Edgar Allan Poe as a source for information and discussion. It is designed to support the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) (GO HERE) BIG READ programming. The NEA's "Reader's Guide" to the stories and poems of Edgar Allan Poe is HERE.

The Vigo County Public Library of Terre Haute, Indiana serves as the home base of this BIG READ initiative. For a calendar of the BOOK DISCUSSIONS and EVENTS related to Poe and his work, visit the homepage of the library HERE.

From Libby, Montana in the north to Ft. Lauderdale, Florida in the south, west to Carmel, California and east to Saco, Maine-- many communities across the country are participating in the BIG READ. However you found your way here, you are a reader and you are welcome. Please pass the word along to others about the READ POE – DISCUSS POE blog. The more readers who participate the livelier the discussion.
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Saturday, January 29, 2011

“The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe Published on This Date, Jan. 29, 1845

January 29, 1845: “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe reaches print for the first time in the New York Evening Mirror. . . .

Often called the most famous poem ever written, early reviews of “The Raven” were ecstatic.  We have to remember these are the days before press agents roamed the land and cyberspace.

“Everybody reads the Poem and praises it . . .”

“A BEAUTIFUL POEM.”

“wild and shivery,”

“A Stanza unknown before to gods, men, and booksellers”

Isn't it a wonder and something to think about that poetry was once reviewed regularly in the press?  How and why has poetry and poets gone out of our lives?  What have we lost?  

It should be added, however, that “The Raven” was not destined to remain without critics. One example:   William Butler Yeats thought the poem “insincere and vulgar.”  Do you see this in the poem?

Kenneth Silverman, one Poe's finest biographers, concludes: “Poe [with “The Raven”] succeeded all too well in suiting the popular taste, a work fatally destined to be Beloved, a poem for people who don’t like poetry.”

Is this harsh?  Too sweeping?  What do you think?

Here are some outstanding readings of the poem (and, inevitably, one spoof).






Thursday, January 27, 2011

It's Not Over Till It's Over --Poe Toaster Lives!

I was there -- the Poe Toaster came

By Michael Madden

Baltimore Sun 2:25 PM EST, January 26, 2011

Yes, Virginia, there is a Poe Toaster.

Now that smoke from the supposed failure of the Poe Toaster to materialize on Jan. 19 has cleared, it is time to consider the fundamental question: Did the Poe Toaster appear, or not?

I was among the crowd gathered outside the graveyard at Baltimore's Westminster Hall, hoping for a glimpse of the Poe Toaster — the mysterious visitor who, since 1949, had crept unnoticed into the ancient graveyard on that date, leaving cognac and flowers on the grave of Edgar Allan Poe. . . .
GO HERE

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Poe and the Big Two-Oh-Two -- born January 19, 1809

No, that's not Poe with a feathered  friend. It's John Cusak who will be playing Poe in a movie scheduled for release in 2011.


 Five minute review of Poe’s life.

Edgar Allan Poe's Birthday: Weirdest, Worst And Most Wicked Pop Culture References (VIDEO, PHOTOS)

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

HAPPY BIRTHDAY EDGAR ALLAN POE

HAPPY BIRTHDAY EDGAR ALLAN POE -- b. January 19, 1809.  Born in Boston, the second child of David and Elizabeth Arnold Hopkins, both traveling stage actors.

Will the three roses and a half-empty bottle of cognac show up on Poe's grave this year?

GO HERE

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Books Around Your Crib

Here's a nice tool that will take you back to the reading habits of yesteryear.

Birthday Best Sellers

To display a list of New York Times best sellers for the week of your birth enter your date of birth and press Show me the List. Note that if your birthday was before 1950 the best sellers for your birth year will be listed.

GO HERE

Compare this list with current best sellers.  Comments?  Are we reading less demanding fiction and non-fiction? Have you read any of these birthday books?  And where's Poe?