225 reviews for:

La Carta Robada

Edgar Allan Poe

3.38 AVERAGE


I find it hard to like Edgar Allan Poe, his writings do not intrigue me at all, on the other hand they confuse me and do not leave me at ease.
What I liked in this book was _as I understood it_ the talk about the mentality of mathematicians and poets, being surrounded by mathematicians who think themselves superior to other beings, I found it amusing to have someone who disagrees, because just like him I find it hard to apply mathematical theories on life,which makes a mathematician almost a delusional person to me.

Grade: B+

I had to read this for my university degree.
challenging mysterious reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

1.75 stars

Again, just not for me.
mysterious medium-paced

ASPACTACULAR

Edgar Allan Poe is the father of detective mysteries, and C. August Dupin, the private detective, is the template from which all fictional detectives are drawn. The Purloined Letter, which I will talk about today, is one of three stories written by Poe featuring Dupin, and is the best of the three, in my opinion.
The Prefect of Parisian Police, G____, gives Dupin and his friend, the narrator, a visit at Dupin’s apartment, the iconic No. 33 Rue Donot, Faubourg St. Germain, in Paris. He is rather frantic, there has been a theft in broad daylight – and perhaps the Prefect could do with Dupin’s help. A letter has been taken from an important Parisian lady. The contents of the letter are such that they could lead to a major scandal.
The important lady was, one day, reading this scandalous letter in her chamber when a royal gentleman walked in. The contents of the letter, if revealed to the royal, would be catastrophic, so the important lady keeps it covered up in her desk – she was not able to get it into her desk drawer quickly enough.
The royal does not see the letter, but his companion D______, a minister of some sorts, does see the letter, and quickly pockets it. The lady cannot stop him, fearful as she is of the contents of the letter being revealed to the royal. Since then, D_____ has been blackmailing the lady to pass on to him him political information, which endangers the security of the nation.
The important lady has now secretively solicited the help of the Prefect in retrieving the letter, but the police have been unsuccessful in their pursuit. They have tried everything – from surreptitiously searching the house of D______ to waylaying him in the streets – but there has been no trace of the letter. Can Dupin help?
The Purloined Letter is a masterpiece of pure detection. There are no murders, not even much physical action. What you find instead is pure ingenuity from Dupin, an antagonist who is almost as intelligent as Dupin; a passively observing narrator (who is though not quite an assistant), and the bumbling police. Ah, all the common tropes of detective fiction, the reader would say. But when is a trope not a trope? It’s when one is reading the piece which introduced the trope. This story was published in 1845.

Reviewed first at The New Indian Express
mysterious reflective medium-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No

This was so entertaining

lol, se me hizo muy predecible pero como siempre, Poe un genio