Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
This magisterial critical biography from Kopley (Edgar Allan Poe and the Dupin Mysteries), an English professor emeritus at Penn State DuBois, traces the life of Edgar Allan Poe (1809--1849) from his childhood as the adopted son of a merchant in Richmond, Va., through his death, likely from excessive drinking, in Baltimore. Poe's life was marked by the tension between his conviction in his own genius and his recurrent depression, Kopley argues, suggesting that though Poe shared the sense of "self supremacy" he ascribes to the eponymous protagonist of his autobiographical poem "Tamerlane," his disappointment over failing to parlay his talents into a remunerative literary career contributed to his alcoholism and persistent "melancholy." Kopley excels at elucidating how Poe's life influenced his work, dissecting, for instance, how the writer grappled with his grief over the premature death of his brother, Henry, at age 24 by recasting himself and Henry as best friends and sailors in the novel The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket. Historical letters from Kopley's personal collection shed new light on Poe's overlooked capacity for conviviality, as when Kopley discusses a letter from the stepdaughter of Poe's friend that describes how Poe would joyfully dance the fandango at Richmond social gatherings. Blending rich literary analysis with new insights into Poe's character, this proves there's still plenty left to say about the master of the macabre. Photos. (Mar.)
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Poe's challenges. Poe scholar Kopley brings authoritative insight to a critical biography of Edgar Allan Poe (1809-49) that can well be called definitive. Drawing on abundant sources, including newly available correspondence of a stepdaughter of Poe's best friend, Kopley offers informative close readings of Poe's poetry, reviews, and fiction, as he recounts his life, loves, aspirations, and travails. Recalled by his schoolmaster as a 12-year-old "cheerful, brimful of mirth," Poe, according to a classmate, could be "self-willed, capricious," and imperious; others found him sad and melancholy. Until he left for college, he lived with foster parents, enduring a vexed relationship with his foster father, John Allan. Frequently in financial trouble, Allan took out his frustrations on his young ward, providing such paltry financial support for college, for example, that Poe spent only 10 months at the University of Virginia. Drinking, gambling, fighting, and defying authority also factored into his aborted college career. Later, he enrolled at West Point, where he ended up arrested and court-martialed for dereliction of duty. A hardworking writer who dreamed of editing a literary magazine, his productivity was undermined by alcoholism. Still, as Kopley amply shows, he published a prodigious body of work: reviews, poems, and stories. In 1836, he married his 13-year-old cousin Virginia, an apparently charming young girl, fond of puppies and kittens. Evidence suggests that they had no sex for two years, and Poe, basking in his wife's love, gave up drinking for a while. Virginia, diagnosed with tuberculosis in 1842, died in 1847, plunging her husband into deep mourning. Although Poe became a literary lion after the publication of "The Raven" in 1845, Kopley depicts a man dogged by darkness. A richly detailed, sympathetic portrait. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.