Answer: POE
POE is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted 345 times.
Referring Clues:
- "The Tell-Tale Heart" writer
 - "The Gold Bug" author
 - Detective story pioneer
 - Last name in horror
 - "Rue Morgue" writer
 - "The Conqueror Worm" poet
 - "The Black Cat" writer
 - "The Gold Bug" writer
 - "The Haunted Palace" poet
 - "The Bells" writer
 - "Ulalume" poet
 - "Dream-Land" poet
 - "MS. Found in a Bottle" writer
 - His name is a letter short of his description
 - Tale teller
 - "The Oblong Box" writer
 - "Eldorado" poet
 - Brooding author
 - "The Bells" poet
 - "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" writer
 - Lenore's creator
 - "Al Aaraaf" writer
 - "The Gold-Bug" writer
 - "A Dream Within a Dream" writer
 - Dupin's creator
 - "The Purloined Letter" writer
 - "If I could dwell / Where Israfel / Hath dwelt ..." writer
 - “The Mystery of Marie Roget” author
 - “Some Words With a Mummy” writer
 - He wrote "To Helen" and "For Annie"
 - "The Premature Burial" author
 - 18-Down writer
 - "The Oblong Box" author
 - Creator of the Ushers
 - "The Raven" poet
 - "All that we see or seem / Is but a dream within a dream" writer
 - "Once upon a midnight dreary" writer
 - Rue Morgue's creator
 - Author who inspired a Baltimore team's nickname
 - "The Tell-Tale Heart" teller
 - "Some Words With a Mummy" penner
 - Author mentioned in the Beatles' "I Am the Walrus"
 - Writer who wrote "I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity"
 - One of the Baltimore Ravens' mascots
 - Poet who wrote "Ah! what is not a dream by day / To him whose eyes are cast ..."
 - Who wrote "I dwelt alone / In a world of moan, / And my soul was a stagnant tide"
 - "The Fall of the House of Usher" writer
 - Writer whose work describes him to a T
 - Who wrote "All that we see or seem / Is but a dream within a dream"
 - "Annabel Lee" poet
 - "The Pit and the Pendulum" author
 - "The Cask of Amontillado" author
 - "The Bells" author
 - Raven maven?
 - "Lenore" poet
 - Author expelled from West Point in 1831
 - Whodunit pioneer
 - "The Tell-Tale Heart" author
 - Hopfrog's creator
 - "The Fall of the House of Usher" author
 - Usher's creator
 - Master of the macabre
 - "The Cask of Amontillado" writer
 - "A Descent Into the Maelstrom" author
 - "Israfel" poet
 - "The Purloined Letter" author
 - Author of "The Raven"
 - Author of "The Black Cat"
 - Literary Lenore's creator
 - "While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping" writer
 - "The Raven" writer
 - Creator of C. Auguste Dupin
 - The Baltimore Ravens are named in his honor
 - Ravenous poet?
 - "Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque" writer
 - "While I pondered, weak and weary" penner
 - "While I nodded, nearly napping ..." writer
 - Pioneer of detective fiction
 - "Then this ebony bird beguiling my sad fancy into smiling" penner
 - Author of the stories collected in "Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque"
 - Writer of "The Purloined Letter"
 - "Lenore" writer
 - Creator of Roderick Usher
 - Rue Morgue creator
 - "The Black Cat" author
 - "Once upon a midnight dreary" poet
 - Subject of the one-man play subtitled "Once Upon a Midnight"
 - Author said to have influenced Hitchcock
 - Usher family's creator
 - ''The Raven'' writer
 - Detective-story pioneer
 - ''The Gold Bug'' author
 - ''Ulalume'' writer
 - ''William Wilson'' author
 - Crime-fiction pioneer
 - ''Annabel Lee'' writer
 - ''The Raven'' author
 - ''The Bells'' poet
 - ''The Gold-Bug'' author
 - ''The Gold Bug'' writer
 - ''The Tell-Tale Heart'' author
 - 2009 is his bicentennial year
 - ''Annabel Lee'' poet
 - Whom the Edgar Award was named for
 - ''The Cask of Amontillado'' author
 - Ravenous writer?
 - Pym's creator
 - ''A Descent Into the Maelstrom'' author
 - Macabre writer buried in Baltimore
 - Raven maniac?
 - ''Dream-Land'' poet
 - ''Some Words With a Mummy'' writer
 - ''Tamerlane'' poet
 - ''The Purloined Letter'' writer
 - Whom the Edgar honors
 - "The Raven" author
 - He wrote of Annabel Lee and Lenore
 - Macabre tale teller
 - Eerie poet
 - Spooky author
 - "Tamerlane" poet
 - "The Sleeper" poet
 - Inspiration for the Baltimore Ravens
 - The Edgar Award's inspiration
 - Author of some stories appropriate for Halloween
 - "Annabel Lee" author
 - Author expelled from West Point
 - A dreary poet upon midnight, once
 - Who wrote "I was never kinder to the old man than during the whole week before I killed him"
 - Edgar Allan who wrote "The Gold-Bug"
 - "MS. Found in a Bottle" author
 - Orphaned author raised by the Allans
 - "While I nodded, nearly napping ..." penner
 - "The Raven" penner
 - Subject of a Richmond museum
 - Creator of the detective C. Auguste Dupin
 - "Hop-Frog" writer
 - Author who influenced Conan Doyle
 - Poet who created the Ushers
 - Gothic giant
 - He raved about a raven
 - Macabre author
 - Tamerlane writer
 - Inspiration for Verne
 - Some Words With a Mummy writer
 - The Mystery of Marie Roget author
 - "Some Words With a Mummy" writer
 - He influenced Baudelaire
 - "Annabel Lee" writer
 - "Ulalume" writer
 - "William Wilson" author
 - "The Gold-Bug" author
 - Al Aaraaf writer
 - His epitaph reads "Quoth the Raven, 'Nevermore.'"
 - His mystery admirer didn't appear graveside to toast his birthday in 2010 for the first time since 1949
 - He wrote about the Ushers
 - Famously dark mystery author
 - "The Masque of the Red Death" author
 - Usher creator
 - The "P" in E.A.P.
 - The Raven poet
 - The P in EAP
 - The "P" in EAP
 - EAP word
 - The Raven writer
 - Macabre master
 - Focus of a Richmond museum
 - "The System of Doctor Tarr and Professor Fether" author
 - Whom Edgar Awards are named for
 - Author of The Raven
 - Who wrote "It was many and many a year ago, / In a kingdom by the sea ..."
 - 'Ulalume' writer
 - 'The Raven' writer
 - 'Ulalume' author
 - 'Tamerlane' writer
 - Roderick Usher's creator
 - 'The Bells' writer
 - 'Lenore' author
 - 'Annabel Lee' author
 - 'Lenore' writer
 - 'The Gold Bug' writer
 - Eerie author
 - 'The Gold-Bug' writer
 - 'The Gold Bug' author
 - Short story pioneer
 - 'Tamerlane' poet
 - 'Annabel Lee' writer
 - 'The Raven' man
 - 'The Fall of the House of Usher' author
 - 'Ulalume' penner
 - 'The Raven' versifier
 - 'The Raven' poet
 - Part of EAP
 - 'The Tell-Tale Heart' author
 - 'Nevermore' man
 - 34-Across' eponym
 - 'The Raven' penner
 - He wrote of Lenore
 - 'The Bells' poet
 - 'Ulalume' poet
 - 'Lenore' poet
 - 'Annabel Lee' poet
 - "The Imp of the Perverse" author
 - "The Imp of the Perverse" writer
 - Edgar Allan ___
 - "The Telltale Heart" penner
 - Author Edgar Allan ___
 - "The Tell-Tale Heart" penner
 - "The Telltale Heart" penner
 - 'The Bells' author
 - Baltimore Ravens mascot
 - Baltimore bard
 - Mystery writer buried in Baltimore
 - Creepy-story teller
 - Author of "The Tell-Tale Heart"
 - Author who influenced Verne
 - "Once upon a midnight dreary ..." poet
 - 'Israfel' poet
 - Detective fiction pioneer
 - Spooky story master
 - 'The Tell-Tale Heart' taleteller
 - Inspiration for a series of Price films
 - Writer for whom the Edgar award is named
 - Emerson called him "the jingle man"
 - Raven poet
 - Author of "The Cask of Amontillado"
 - The Baltimore Ravens were named in his honor
 - American master of the macabre
 - Author who inspired Verne
 - Mystery master
 - "William Wilson" writer
 - "A Dream Within a Dream" penner
 - Literary figure whose name is a letter short of something he wrote
 - He wrote "The Raven"
 - Part of E.A.P.
 - 'To Helen' poet
 - "I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity" writer
 - "I wish I could write as mysterious as a cat" writer
 - "... rapping at my chamber door" poet
 - Top-row poet on the "Sgt. Pepper" album cover
 - "Ah, broken is the golden bowl! the spirit flown forever!" poet
 - Modern detective fiction pioneer
 - "All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream" writer
 - He wrote about "a midnight dreary"
 - ___ House and Museum (Baltimore attraction)
 - Author of macabre tales
 - Boston-born writer
 - He wrote a famous poem that uses 20 different end rhymes for "ore"
 - M. Valdemar's creator
 - Writer of the line "Ah, distinctly I remember it was in the bleak December"
 - Creator of one who pondered "Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore"
 - For whom the Edgar awards are named
 - Puzzle-theme mystery writer: 1809-1849
 - Teller of macabre tales
 - "Berenice" author
 - Author known for the macabre
 - Baltimore Ravens' raven
 - "The Pit and the Pendulum" writer
 - 19th-century master of the macabre
 - Poet Edgar Allan
 - U.S. horror writer
 - Poet of Baltimore
 - Author of "William Wilson"
 - Noted writer who married his first cousin when she was 13
 - Mystery writer whose Baltimore home is preserved as a museum
 - Writer who inspired the Raven Award
 - Author who wrote "I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity"
 - "Hop-Frog" author
 - Who wrote of "sorrow for the lost Lenore"
 - Baltimore Ravens mascot named for an author
 - He wrote of Roderick Usher
 - For whom the Edgar was named
 - Poet for whom the Edgar Awards are named
 - "The Gold-Bug" penner
 - The Raven creator
 - "The 18-Down" poet
 - Writer Edgar Allan ___
 - Who wrote the line "Once upon a midnight dreary ..."
 - ___ Dameron, fighter pilot for the Resistance in "Star Wars" films
 - Famous writer who entered West Point at 21
 - He wrote of "the sweet Lenore"
 - Author of "Ulalume"
 - Author of the macabre
 - "Star Wars: The Last Jedi" pilot
 - For whom the Edgar Award is named
 - Childhood inspiration for Bradbury
 - Writer with an interest in cryptography
 - Writer whose room at the University of Virginia is now a mini-museum
 - Creator of Arthur Gordon Pym
 - Author of eerie stories
 - Creator of Pym
 - Poet who wrote "Once upon a midnight dreary ..."
 - Poet buried in Baltimore
 - He wrote "The 42-Across"
 - Writer after whom the Edgar Award is named
 - Dameron in "Star Wars" movies
 - He wrote "All that we see or seem / Is but a dream within a dream"
 - Poet who wrote "We loved with a love that was more than love"
 - Name in eerie fiction
 - "To Helen" poet
 - "Star Wars" pilot
 - Eerie writer, or the first three letters of his profession
 - Author of macabre fiction
 - "Once upon a midnight dreary ..." penner
 - Half of the "Star Wars" pairing Stormpilot
 - Whom Emerson called "the jingle-man"
 - Roots band Larkin ___
 - Director Tayarisha
 - "The Masque of the Red Death" writer
 - "Quoth the Raven 'Nevermore'" writer
 - Name of the Baltimore Ravens' mascot
 - "The Last Jedi" pilot
 - 19th-century mystery writer with just one complete novel
 - Fittingly, the first three letters of 32-Across
 - Filipino action star Fernando ___ Jr.
 - Whom a mystery award honors
 - "Star Wars" pilot Dameron
 - Who wrote "To Helen" and "For Annie"
 - He once wrote "I became insane, with long intervals of horrible sanity"
 - Mascot of the N.F.L.'s Ravens, appropriately
 - Author of "The Gold-Bug"
 - BB-8's owner Dameron
 - "Never to suffer would never to have been blessed" writer
 - "Angry Johnny" singer
 - Baltimore Ravens mascot named for a writer
 - "The Purloined Letter" writer Edgar Allan ___
 - Poet who wrote the line "But we loved with a love that was more than love"
 - Oscar Isaac's "Star Wars" character
 - Poet who quoth "Nevermore"
 - Poet seen in this clue
 - "The Raven" poet Edgar Allan ___
 - Poet Edgar Allan ___
 - "The Last Jedi" pilot Dameron
 - Writer buried in a Baltimore churchyard
 - Aptly named mascot of the Baltimore Ravens
 - Subject of museums in Richmond, Va., and Baltimore, Md.
 - "The Force Awakens" pilot Dameron
 - "While I nodded nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping" poet
 - Creator of the sleuth C. Auguste Dupin
 - Mascot of the Baltimore Ravens
 - "A Dream Within a Dream" poet
 - Creator of the mystery-solving C. Auguste Dupin
 - He rhymed 19 different words with "Lenore" in his most famous work
 - Macabre poet
 - Short story writer Edgar Allan ___
 
Last Seen In:
- LA Times - October 27, 2025
 - USA Today - October 06, 2025
 - USA Today - September 11, 2025
 - LA Times - September 07, 2025
 - LA Times - August 03, 2025
 - New York Times - July 08, 2025
 - New York Times - June 29, 2025
 - LA Times - June 08, 2025
 - USA Today - March 24, 2025
 - New York Times - March 16, 2025
 - New York Times - March 04, 2025
 - LA Times - February 11, 2025
 - LA Times - January 26, 2025
 - New York Times - December 08, 2024
 - New York Times - November 13, 2024
 - New York Times - October 20, 2024
 - USA Today - September 13, 2024
 - New York Times - August 04, 2024
 - LA Times - July 29, 2024
 - New York Times - July 07, 2024
 
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