Yes. Edgar Allan Poe wrote 'The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket', which is considered a novel. It's a story filled with mystery, adventure, and elements of the supernatural, much like his other works. Poe was a master at creating an eerie and engaging atmosphere, and this novel is no exception.
Sure, Poe was a novelist. His novels often explored themes of mystery and the macabre. For instance, 'The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket' shows his storytelling prowess in the novel format.
Yes, in a sense. While not in the modern form of detective novels we know today, Poe's works like 'The Murders in the Rue Morgue' were precursors to the detective genre. These stories had elements such as a mystery to be solved, a brilliant analyst (in this case, C. Auguste Dupin), and a series of clues that needed to be pieced together. His approach to these stories influenced the development of detective novels in later years, as other writers built on the foundation he laid with his unique style of mystery and deduction.
Sure. He wrote at least one novel, namely 'The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket'. This novel contains many of the elements that Poe was known for in his shorter works, such as a sense of the macabre and a fascination with the limits of human experience. It is an important part of Poe's oeuvre and shows his versatility as a writer, not just in terms of his famous short stories and poems, but also in the realm of longer fictional works.