The Very Eye of Death - Info and Reading Options
By Edgar Allan Poe

"The Very Eye of Death" was published by Creation Oneiros in 2012, it has 191 pages and the language of the book is English.
“The Very Eye of Death” Metadata:
- Title: The Very Eye of Death
- Author: Edgar Allan Poe
- Language: English
- Number of Pages: 191
- Publisher: Creation Oneiros
- Publish Date: 2012
“The Very Eye of Death” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ Fiction - Mystery and detective stories - monograms - Detective and mystery stories - Short stories - Detective and mystery fiction - Fiction, mystery & detective, short stories - American fiction (fictional works by one author) - American Detective and mystery stories - Cryptography in literature - Ciphers in literature
- People: C. Auguste Dupin - Minister D— - Prosper Jolyot de Crébillon
- Places: Paris
Edition Specifications:
- Format: Paperback
- Pagination: 191p.
Edition Identifiers:
- The Open Library ID: OL26047617M - OL17462466W
- Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) ID: 809153896
- ISBN-13: 9781902197500
- ISBN-10: 190219750X
- All ISBNs: 190219750X - 9781902197500
AI-generated Review of “The Very Eye of Death”:
"The Very Eye of Death" Table Of Contents:
- 1- THE MAN OF THE CROWD (1840)
- 2- THE MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE (1841)
- 3- THE MYSTERY OF MARIE ROGET (184243)
- 4- THE PURLOINED LETTER (1845)
- 5- "THOU ART THE MAN" (1844)
- 6- THE GOLD BUG (1843)
"The Very Eye of Death" Description:
The Open Library:
Edgar Allan Poe's experiments in crime and cryptography fiction can be seen to date from 1840 and "The Man Of The Crowd" — a crime story without a crime — and reach their perfect expression in his trilogy of tales involving Parisian detective Auguste Dupin: "Murders In The Rue Morgue", "The Mystery Of Marie Rogét", and "The Purloined Letter", works which created and established detective fiction as a genre. THE VERY EYE OF DEATH collects these classic stories along two others: '"Thou Art The Man"' (1844) was Poe moving crime fiction from Paris to a grotesque and burlesque rural America, while "The Gold Bug" (1843), a treasure-hunt littered Mith human bones, was inspired by positive reaction to Poe's articles on cryptography in Graham 's Magazine. Together, these six stories of guilt, murder, subterfuge and "ratiocination" form Poe's complete investigation into a zone where human carnage and concealment inspires others to new heights of intellectual imagination — an affirmation of life through the very eye of death.
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