![]() To create his frightful, dread-soaked short stories and poems, Edgar Allan PoeĬombined and recombined certain literary elements, much as a poisoner might use Those familiar with “The Tell-Tale Heart” will be delighted to watch the psychological drama unfold as Hinds conceptualizes the famously grisly details while playing with visually striking splashes of color to further accentuate the terror.īefittingly dark, atmospheric, and evocative. Particularly sinister is the artwork that accompanies “The Masque of the Red Death ” the specter that wordlessly passes among the partygoers is terrifying. Red and black tones are thrown about with controlled force, fully realizing the gothic influences of Poe’s writing. Hinds’s vivid, haunting mixed-media illustrations pair perfectly with Poe’s unfailingly bleak and terrible tales. School Library Journal(starred review) - link Audio: Metrowest Library author panel - presentation and Q & A ![]() The Harrisburg Patriot-News ran two bits of an interview here and here, but the full transcript is here. Video interview by Paul Falcone, with clips from a presentation at Wellesley Booksmith and clips of me doing aikido ![]() Radio interview with Bill Buschell on WNYE's Hellenic Public Radio ![]() Brief video interview with Politics & Prose Brief video interview with Candlewick Press for Macbeth Interviews: (external links open in new window) ![]()
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