Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849) is a classic author whose works are in the public domain.

Poe's collected works showcase a master craftsman who invented psychological horror, turning the human mind itself into a landscape of terror, guilt, and obsession. These stories burrow into the darkest corners of consciousness with a precision that still unsettles readers today.

Poe's collected works constitute a masterclass in psychological terror and structural precision, proving that the grotesque and beautiful are separated by the thinnest of lines.

Poe's masterworks of psychological terror and melancholic beauty reach their apex in this comprehensive collection, where his obsessive exploration of death, loss, and the darker corners of the human mind created the blueprint for modern horror. The Raven and his lesser-known tales showcase a writer who weaponized language itself—transforming rhythm and repetition into instruments of dread that still unsettle readers today.

Poe's atmospheric masterpiece decays alongside its haunted mansion, where a family's buried secrets emerge through sound, decay, and mounting psychological torment until reality itself fractures. The story achieves terror not through jump scares but through the slow realization that sanity is fragile.

Poe's only novel descends into psychological and physical chaos aboard a doomed ship, blending maritime horror with philosophical dread as his protagonist confronts mutiny, cannibalism, and mysteries that defy rational explanation.

When plague ravages the kingdom, a prince seals his court behind impenetrable walls, believing luxury and isolation can ward off death itself—until a masked figure arrives to prove that some terrors cannot be locked away. Poe distills pure dread into a novella that uses a single, relentless symbol to explore how we construct dangerous illusions of safety.

Poe compresses a lifetime of betrayal, vengeance, and madness into a journey through Italian catacombs, where every detail—from wine to stone to silence—becomes a weapon of psychological terror.



