Simple, short, and clear, I was able to sit down and read this in one sitting.
Edgar Allan Poe is one of my favorite writers, but I didn't know very much about his tragic life. This book filled in many of those gaps about his childhood, his education, his work history, his slow rise to fame, and his personal relationships. Now hoping this series has a book on Hawthorne.
Small gripe about the writing style - the author (Gigliotti) uses "whom" inconsistently. On pages 45 and 55, there is a "who" that should be "whom." "He lost someone who[m] he had loved," and "Jane Stanard, who[m] he thought of..."
I understand if modern writers discontinue usage of whom, especially in a book for younger readers, but later he correctly uses "whom." I only demand consistency.