Popular Culture Review Vol. 22, No. 1, Winter 2011 | Page 59

Thank You, Mr. Poe 55 rye; / Four and twenty blackbirds, / Baked in a pie” (563). Job, like the OurangOutang, was just mimicking behaviors he had learned through his extraordinarily limited socialization. The other common point worth mentioning in comparing these two murderers is their strength. The strength of each primitive killer was noted by the detective of each scenario and was a trademark of each situation. In “Murders in the Rue Morgue,” the ape’s strength allowed him to strangle the younger woman and brutally shove her body up the chinmey and then decapitate the older woman using only a straight razor (Poe 283). Job’s strength, having been developed by climbing the walls of underground caverns, primate-like, for 50 years, was evident at each crime scene by the brutal strength used to break the necks of his victims. Thus far, I have discussed how Preston and Child directly reference earlier works of Poe and how they borrow specific elements in order to create a similar sense of horror in their novels; in addition, Preston and Child also borrow elements of mystery from Poe’s legacy to contribute to the mysterious, detective natures of their stories. One source claims “. .. one recent list [numbers] thirtytwo separate elements which Poe contributed to later detective fiction: amateur detective, locked-room mystery, ballistics, blood tests” (Panek 31); however, the two primary elements which Poe is credited for creating in the detective genre that are also evident in the Pendergast mysteries that I will discuss include the locked room mystery (Anderson 14) and invention of the detective sidekick (Anderson 14). Poe first demonstrated the locked-room mystery with “The Murders in the Rue Morgue” in which he had the monkey escape through a window. The room was seemingly sealed, but upon Detective Dupin’s examination of the only possible exits, he discovered that one of the nails sealing the window shut had been broken in half Because this nail was broken, the Ourang-Outang had been able to open the window, escape through it, and close the window behind him again, not disturbing the broken nail (298-299). This locked-room style of mystery was used in two of the three Preston and Child novels. Still Life with Crows and Brimstone; while a portion the mystery presented in each story is definitely classifiable as a locked-room mystery, Preston and Child take Poe’s original idea and moderni ze it. In Still Life with Crows, the locked room is actually a locked underground cavern. Because it is a tourist destination, the owner of the cave has installed and keeps padlocked a heavy door leading to the innermost caverns, which turn out to be the place where the entire mystery of the story is solved. Detective Pendergast, much in the spirit of Dupin, deduces that there has to be another way into the caverns since the main door is padlocked, which of course there is. He discovers the secret entrance with the use of GPS and aerial maps which aid him in the ultimately murder-solving discovery (427). Brimstone's locked-door mystery has also been adapted to make sense in this modem era of technology. Many of the victims in Brimstone were killed by