Rutgers University Press

Search Our Website

free shipping

podcast

 
Navigation Menu











Midnight Dreary
Bookstore | Subject List | SUBJECT LIST: A - E (New Books Added Daily) | Biography, Autobiography, Memoir | Midnight Dreary

Midnight Dreary
Midnight Dreary

Price: $25.00 

Subtitle: The Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe
Author: John Evangelist Walsh
Subject: True Crime/Biography
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-2605-1
Pages: 200 pp., 17 b&w illus.
Description: The first book-length investigation of the puzzling circumstances attending the tragic death of Edgar Allan Poe, offering an original solution.

With the publication of three short tales in the 1840s, Poe invented the detective story. Then his own sudden and bizarre death, still unsolved after 150 years, created a real-life mystery as tantalizing as any of his famous stories. Was it epilepsy? Lawless thugs? A diabetic coma? His heart ? Alcohol?

Poe departed this life in the best mystery-novel style. While traveling alone from Richmond, Virginia, to New York City, he disappeared for nearly a week. When seen again, he was terribly drunk and nearly dead in the Baltimore. Taken to a hospital, he never said what happened to him, where he'd been all that time, or who he'd been with. A few days later, after alternating periods of silence and raving delirium, he died. The immediate cause of death given was "congestion of the brain," or "inflammation of the brain," serviceable phrases in a day that knew little of internal medicine.

At first no one seriously questioned the verdict that the culprit was liquor, that Poe died as a result of complications arising from drunken debauchery. Inevitably, as the years passed and his fame grew, efforts were made to clear him of what seemed weak, wanton self-destruction. While many theories of a physical nature about precipitating causes have been suggested,-ranging from rabies to a blow on the head-no one has seriously probed the mystery of that missing week. Until now. Midnight Dreary examines the last days one of America's most admired authors, definitively untangling more than a century of speculation and finally putting to rest on its 150th anniversary what may be the greatest Poe mystery of all.

John Evangelist Walsh has written more than a dozen well-received books of history and biography, all based on original research. His Poe the Detective was awarded an Edgar by the Mystery Writers of America. In addition, he has written on such topics as the invention of the airplane, the search for St. Peter's body in Rome, the great Piltdown fraud, and the Shroud of Turin. As a literary biographer, Walsh has probed the lives and careers of Robert Frost, Emily Dickinson, and Francis Thompson. In 1994 his investigation of the legendary romance between Abraham Lincoln and Ann Rutledge, The Shadows Rise, was a finalist for the annual Lincoln Prize.


Receive special offers and book notices by email. Sign up for RU READING?
Price: $25.00 





It's safe to shop at Rutgers. Please, read our privacy and security statement.
Copyright and Disclaimer ©2007 Rutgers University Press. Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey