Poe's haunting stories and poems, full of mystery and melancholy, remain timeless classics. His legacy as the master of ...
Edgar Allan Poe, the author who penned some of American literature’s most chilling tales, once called Richmond home.
Though Poe lived a nomadic lifestyle in the 1800s, he settled in the Bronx with his ailing wife, Virginia, in 1846. With ...
One morning in the spring of 1844, subscribers to the New York Sun were astonished to read a front-page story praising “the ...
Best known for her short story “The Lottery” and novel “The Haunting of Hill House,” Shirley Jackson’s lesser-known “We Have ...
On Oct. 30 and Oct. 31, David Keltz returns to the Alexandria History Museum at The Lyceum for the annual “Poe in Alexandria” ...
Alberto Crescenti, head of the state emergency medical system, said on Argentina’s Todo Noticias TV channel that Payne fell ...
Whoa! The decades-long woes of the Aspen and Pitkin County economies, and how they overburden the arteries of Highway 82, Interstate 70 and Independence Pass, could be fodder for an unwritten Edgar ...
Anyone who has watched network television probably has a belief that detective stories have been around forever. Detectives, ...
One of the newer events at Tusculum University, which has developed a following in the region, will be back with more ...
There is nothing quite as dark and mysterious as the lore that surrounds famed poet and storyteller, Edgar Allan Poe.
Filled with visual and verbal nods to the writer’s life and work, Nevermore: The Imaginary Life and Mysterious Death of Edgar Allan Poe combines the biographical with the allegorical, allowing ...