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Edgar Allan Poe’s short story “The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar” was published on December 20, 1845, in The Broadway Journal (a print publication of which Poe himself was an editor) in the United States, and then later in England. Due to the distinctive, deliberate way in which it is written—with, as Poe wrote, “a more pronounced effort at verisimilitude for the sake of effect” (Poe, Edgar Allan. Qtd. in “Poe: A Life in Letters,” by Lesley Ginsberg. The Oxford Handbook of Edgar Allan Poe. Oxford Academic Books, 2018)—Poe was surprised to learn that many readers actually mistook the fictional story for an account of a real event. He wrote, “I find the Valdemar case universally copied and received as truth […] even in spite of my disclaimer” (Poe, Edgar Allan. Qtd. in “Poe: A Life in Letters,” by Lesley Ginsberg. The Oxford Handbook of Edgar Allan Poe. Oxford Academic Books, 2018). Though sometimes considered an example of a literary “hoax” for this reason, Poe himself claimed that his intention was not to fool the public, but rather to employ a convincing, report-like style to lend an air of believability to his tale and to make it more effective as a horror story.
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