Edgar Allan Poe Mysteries
ebook
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Disquiet Heart
A Novel
by Randall Silvis
Part of the Edgar Allan Poe Mysteries series
"A master storyteller." - New York Times Book Review
Pittsburgh, 1847: A cholera epidemic rages, and young women are disappearing…
Poe is devastated by the death of his beloved wife and travels to Pittsburgh for a change of scenery, reuniting with Augie Dubbins, now a young man in search of adventure.
Upon their arrival in Pittsburgh, Augie and Poe discover that several young women have disappeared over the past six months, adding to the unease caused by a recent cholera epidemic. Poe and Augie traverse the gritty city in hopes of discovering the whereabouts of these women, and their captor.
Additional Praise for Disquiet Heart:
"Moody, emotionally tortured, and convincingly atmospheric, (Disquiet Heart provides) a graphically described descent into Poe's opiate addictions."-Kirkus Reviews
ebook
(0)
On Night's Shore
A Novel
by Randall Silvis
Part of the Edgar Allan Poe Mysteries series
"A master storyteller." - New York Times Book Review
On Night's Shore brings us deep into the troubled psyche of Edgar Allan Poe and the power struggle between the sleazy underbelly and the business elite of nineteenth-century New York City.
Standing on the grimy banks of the Hudson River, street urchin Augie Dubbins spots a young woman toss her baby into the water, then jump in herself. As the only witness to the tragedy, Augie sees an opportunity to make a few pennies recounting the events, and in doing so encounters a struggling young journalist named Edgar Allan Poe, a poet and newspaper hack whose penchant for saying the wrong thing at the wrong time has earned him more than a few enemies.
When the unlikely duo discover the body of yet another young woman shortly after, they become entrapped in a mire of murder, greed, and power that stretches from the Five Points slums to the gleaming heights of Fifth Avenue.
Additional Praise for On Night's Shore:
"A riveting tale of murder and betrayal… On Night's Shore drips with descriptive power." - New York Post
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