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Ungdomsbøger
Behind locked gates and iron resolve, Prince Prospero builds a world untouched by suffering. Music fills the halls. Costumes shimmer under shifting colors. The outside world is dismissed as something distant, something already defeated. Inside, laughter rises easily—until the night begins to press back.
The masquerade grows stranger with every passing hour. Rooms glow with unnatural hues, each more unsettling than the last. A clock marks time with a sound no one can ignore. Each chime halts the revelers mid-step, forcing them to remember what they chose to forget. When a silent figure appears among them, moving with slow certainty, the mood shifts. No one reaches out. No one dares speak first. The prince must decide whether power still holds within these walls—or if something else has already crossed the threshold.
Edgar Allan Poe crafts a setting that tightens with every page. The celebration feels vivid, yet something is always just off. The longer the night continues, the harder it becomes to ignore what waits at its center.
Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849) published “The Masque of the Red Death” in Graham’s Magazine in 1842. He built his reputation through works such as “The Tell-Tale Heart,” “The Fall of the House of Usher,” and “The Black Cat,” blending psychological intensity with precise, haunting imagery. His stories often place characters in enclosed spaces where pressure builds until a single moment forces action. This story stands among his most striking works, pairing vivid design with a growing sense that time itself cannot be kept outside.
© 2025 Scott Miller (Lydbog): 9798347963607
Udgivelsesdato
Lydbog: 1. februar 2025