The Raven
An Edgar Allan Poe and Lou Reed mash-up, illustrated with paintings by Mattotti: now in paperback. Back in 2003, Lou Reed paid tribute to poet Edgar Allan Poe with his sprawling album, The Raven. This gorgeous book of art and poetry, made in collaboration with Italian illustrator Lorenzo...
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An Edgar Allan Poe and Lou Reed mash-up, illustrated with paintings by Mattotti: now in paperback. Back in 2003, Lou Reed paid tribute to poet Edgar Allan Poe with his sprawling album, The Raven. This gorgeous book of art and poetry, made in collaboration with Italian illustrator Lorenzo Mattotti, shares its title with that album and further explores Reed’s fascination with Poe’s work. Reed’s poetically streetwise sensibility and style works in surprising harmony with Poe’s dark chronicles of terror and despair, just as Mattotti’s vivid, abstracted and enigmatic paintings perfectly complement Reed’s haunting, contemporary interpretation of Poe’s vision. An instant sellout when published in hardcover in 2011, this new softcover edition should leap off the shelves as well. 188
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9781606995853 (1606995855)
Publish date: October 19th 2012
Publisher: Fantagraphics
Pages no: 188
Edition language: English
Category:
Classics,
Academic,
School,
Literature,
American,
Mystery,
Poetry,
Horror,
Short Stories,
Gothic,
Fiction
The way the poem flows is beautiful. It makes you want to keep reading. And the illustrations are gorgeous.A dark poem about a man who has lost his love, Lenore. He hears someone knocking at his chamber door, but when he opens it there is no one there. He then opens the window and in flies the raven...
Genre: Classics / Poetry / Horror / Animals Year Published: 2006 Year Read: 2014 Publisher: KCP Poetry Now, I have been dying to read some of Edgar Allan Poe’s works for a long time and now I finally got the chance to reread Edgar Allan Poe’s classic poem called “The Raven” in graphi...
It's worth pointing out that, according to my Horrible Histories book on the Saxons, the raven was the Saxon messenger from the devil, arrived to foretell a person's fate, as described in Robert Southey's "The Devil's Due".
A classic that is a must read for a foundation in the wonderful world of October lit.