John Tresch is Professor and Mellon Chair in History of Art, Science, and Folk Practice at the Warburg Institute, London. He has held fellowships at the New York Public Library, the Institute for Advanced Studies, and the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, and has been a visiting researcher at King's College London and the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales. He is the author of The Romantic Machine: Utopian Science and Technology After Napoleon.
[A] luminous study . . . Tresch brilliantly illuminates the process by which Poe synthesized his scientific knowledge in his works of the imagination. --Bill Kelly, Booklist [An] expansive biography . . . Throughout, Tresch does a fine job balancing insightful discussions of Poe's literary works alongside his intriguing scientific pursuits. A surprising side of Poe splendidly revealed. --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Tresch sheds light on Edgar Allan Poe's engagement with science in this intriguing biography . . . While [he] addresses the common impression of Poe as a 'morbid dreamer' and a penniless writer, he takes things further by offering a nimble account of the emerging science of Poe's day. Fans of Poe's work--and science enthusiasts---will appreciate Tresch's fresh angle. --Publishers Weekly [Balances] insightful discussions of Poe's literary works alongside his intriguing scientific pursuits. A surprising side of Poe splendidly revealed. --Kirkus Reviews This biography is a masterwork on a master, and one of my favorite reads in years. John Tresch lets the reader see how Poe's imagination was not only wild but also procedural, not only unbounded but also formal. In these pages, we meet the engineer of horror, the trickster of reason, and the mutinous captain of mystery. --Rivka Galchen, author of Everyone Knows Your Mother Is a Witch and American Innovations In this original and moving biography, John Tresch brilliantly integrates Poe the man and the writer with his deep engagement with the sciences of his day. He lucidly reveals the content of these fascinations, and convincingly illuminates their powerful influence on Poe's writings and thought. Tresch discerns Poe's privileging of mind and mystery over frigid empiricism and his terrifying perception that only spiritual darkness lay beneath the surface of the material knowledge that was transforming the world. A transfixing and eye-opening portrait. --Daniel J. Kevles, professor emeritus of history at Yale University and author of In the Name of Eugenics and The Physicists At last, a biography of Poe that places him in the thick of the philosophical and scientific investigations of his time, reclaiming the rigor of his thought, the inventiveness of his writings, and a personality as visionary as it is audacious. John Tresch gives us the Poe whose deepest preoccupations became a threat to the smug morality, highfalutin cant, and 'doggerel aesthetics' of his contemporaries. An astonishing feat of research and beautiful prose, this book gives Poe what he has long deserved. --Colin Dayan, author of In the Belly of Her Ghost and Animal Quintet This marvelous time machine transports us deep into the nineteenth century and the company of its most fascinating citizens. Poetry, mesmerism, the rise of American science--it's all here, as vivid as can be. --Fred Turner, Harry and Norman Chandler Professor of Communication at Stanford University and author of The Democratic Surround Poe's devilish analytical wit and radical aesthetic genius through John Tresch's marvelously informative biography. The great poet's delirious cosmological artifices, Tresch shows, are in dialogue with his wide-ranging knowledge of technology, empirical method, materialism, and the newly forming scientific institutions--and trickster spectacles--of his time. --Charles Bernstein, professor emeritus of English at the University of Pennsylvania and author of Near/Miss and A Poetics John Tresch juxtaposes Poe's biography with the rise of American science to turn a familiar story into a mesmerizing narrative, cast like a magic lantern show. Almost everything the author wrote takes on stunning new meaning. This is Poe wrestling with the big questions--and Tresch unfolding the history of a momentous cultural revolution. --J. Gerald Kennedy, author of Strange Nation John Tresch's The Reason for the Darkness of the Night is a lively and learned investigation of the life of Poe through his literary engagement with science--an accessible and exciting exploration. --Richard Kopley, author of Edgar Allan Poe and the Dupin Mysteries John Tresch's engaging biography of an enigmatic genius puts Edgar Allan Poe right where he belongs: present at the creation of American science. --Richard R. John, author of Network Nation