Popular Culture Review Vol. 22, No. 1, Winter 2011 | Page 58

54 Popular Culture Review the wall, then grabbed the torch and hastily made his way through the rat’s nest of tunnels to the ancient stairwell. . ( 6 8 4 ) . The relation to the ancient Montresor vaults and events of the story are again unmistakable. The next characteristics found in Poe’s horror fiction which are evident in Preston and Child’s series are the gruesome murders. Both sets of writers implement similar methods of murder and deception in order to demonstrate the depravity of their criminals and because “. . . the secret vault, and the sealed room—all conventional scenes of Gothic mystery—evoke anxiety because they pose the implicit threat of fatal enclosure” (Kennedy 115). To force the reader to address this innate fear of enclosure, entombment behind a brick wall seems to be a common favorite method of murder and/or disposal of a corpse. In both “Cask of Amontillado” and Brimstone, characters are chained to a cold, damp, ancient stone wall while alive, and are then taunted by their captors as they watch them, layer by layer, pile up the new brick wall that will act the final crypt. Lastly, in Cabinet o f Curiosities, the first sight of atrocities in the novel was the 36 sets of bones found concealed within 12 underground charnels. These remains were found to be buried post-mortem, like the victim in “The Black Cat.” This elaborate method of murdering and hiding bodies is quite complicated and usually not practiced by fictional killers in books, which makes the use by Preston and Child reminiscent of Poe’s tales. Dismemberment was another effect of death common between Poe’s old text and Preston and Child’s new one. Poe uses dismemberment with his murder in “The Tell-Tale Heart”; the narrator explains that “I dismembered the corpse. I cut off the head and the arms and the legs” (388). The dismemberment of corpses is repeated in Cabinet o f Curiosities with the 36 sets of remains found in the charnels. These bodies were “dismembered in the same fashion, at the neck, shoulders, and hips” (31). In conjunction with the other evidence, this method of dismemberment used for corpse disposal in Cabinet o f Curiosities could arguably have been inspired by Poe’s earlier example. The third horrific correlation between Poe and Preston and Child’s texts addressing gruesome deaths, following entombment and then dismemberment, is also one of the examples of hybridization of horror and detective genres initiated by Poe. In “Murders of the Rue Morgue,” the monster responsible for the graphically violent deaths of the two women was a freakishly strong, primitive Ourang-Outang. The creature responsible for the gruesome series of murders in Still Life with Crows was a freakishly strong, primitive, asocial human being named Job. Though the killer of “Murders in the Rue Morgue” was an animal, he was trying to emulate human behavior with “Razor in hand, and fully lathered, it was sitting before the looking-glass, attempting the operation of shaving . . . ” (310). Job also mimics humanity with his recreation of the scenes from his nursery rhyme book, the only exposure to the outside world of people he ever experienced. He was just trying to play with people and then mistakenly killed them; in one instance, he stuffed the body of the victim with crows and stitched it up to animate the rhyme “Sing a song of sixpence, / A pocket full of