One of The Christian Science Monitor's ten best books of June
An innovative biography of Edgar Allan Poe―highlighting his fascination and feuds with science.
Decade
after decade, Edgar Allan Poe remains one of the most popular American
writers. He is beloved around the world for his pioneering detective
fiction, tales of horror, and haunting, atmospheric verse. But what if
there was another side to the man who wrote “The Raven” and “The Fall of
the House of Usher”?
In The Reason for the Darkness of the Night,
John Tresch offers a bold new biography of a writer whose short,
tortured life continues to fascinate. Shining a spotlight on an era when
the lines separating entertainment, speculation, and scientific inquiry
were blurred, Tresch reveals Poe’s obsession with science and lifelong
ambition to advance and question human knowledge. Even as he composed
dazzling works of fiction, he remained an avid and often combative
commentator on new discoveries, publishing and hustling in literary
scenes that also hosted the era’s most prominent scientists,
semi-scientists, and pseudo-intellectual rogues. As one newspaper put
it, “Mr. Poe is not merely a man of science―not merely a poet―not merely
a man of letters. He is all combined; and perhaps he is something
more.”
Taking us through his early training in mathematics and
engineering at West Point and the tumultuous years that followed, Tresch
shows that Poe lived, thought, and suffered surrounded by science―and
that many of his most renowned and imaginative works can best be
understood in its company. He cast doubt on perceived certainties even
as he hungered for knowledge, and at the end of his life delivered a
mind-bending lecture on the origins of the universe that would win the
admiration of twentieth-century physicists. Pursuing extraordinary
conjectures and a unique aesthetic vision, he remained a figure of
explosive contradiction: he gleefully exposed the hoaxes of the era’s
scientific fraudsters even as he perpetrated hoaxes himself.
Tracing Poe’s hard and brilliant journey, The Reason for the Darkness of the Night is
an essential new portrait of a writer whose life is synonymous with
mystery and imagination―and an entertaining, erudite tour of the world
of American science just as it was beginning to come into its own.
Nessun commento:
Posta un commento