
A freshly assembled volume brings together several of Edgar Allan Poe’s lesser‑known tales and critical essays, rendered into French with meticulous care. The translator follows the tradition begun by Baudelaire, preserving Poe’s razor‑sharp wit and unsettling elegance while making the language feel immediate for modern ears. Readers will sense the historic effort to rescue these stories from the shadows of misattribution and partial translations.
Within, the chilling narrative of a burial gone wrong sits beside the darkly comic misadventures of a mischievous monkey named Bon‑Bon, illustrating Poe’s uncanny ability to blend horror with humor. The pieces are marked by his signature atmospheric tension, intricate wordplay, and a fascination with the limits of the human mind. Listeners can expect a tour through eerie chambers of imagination, where each story teases the senses and invites contemplation of the strange, the grotesque, and the beautifully bizarre.
Language
fr
Duration
~6 hours (349K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1809–1849
A master of mystery and the macabre, he helped shape the modern detective story while giving classic Gothic fiction some of its darkest, most unforgettable images. His poems and tales, including "The Raven" and "The Tell-Tale Heart," still feel vivid, eerie, and surprisingly modern.
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