“They
who dream by day are cognizant of many things which escape those who dream only
by night.” – Edgar Allan Poe
Poe was born in Boston on this date in 1809. A key figure in the worldwide
Romanticism movement, he was
both a poet and one of America's earliest writers of short mysteries, many of which were macabre in nature.
The first well-known American writer
to try to make a living by writing alone, Poe had spurts of decent amounts of income followed by periods of
destitution. Ultimately, his lack of
income may have been a contributing factor to his early death. But the actual cause of his death at age 40
has never been determined, and has been the subject of many movies and “whodunit?”
books.
Poe probably would have liked
that. He enjoyed writing both a good mystery
and a good detective story. Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle noted, "Each [of Poe's detective stories] is a root
from which a whole literature has developed . . . Where was the detective story
until Poe breathed the breath of life into it?" The Mystery Writers of America have named
their annual awards for excellence, "Edgars.”
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