THE CASK OF AMONTILLADO by Edgar Allan Poe Summary & Analysis

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  • Опубликовано: 24 янв 2025

Комментарии • 114

  • @mattwalters6834
    @mattwalters6834 Месяц назад +1

    1:20 one thing to note; amontillado is not Italian; it’s Spanish, there’s been discussion about that. But these guys are Italian noblemen; so it makes sense that they have different stuff from different countries. They drink Medoc and De Grave which is French.
    Also the part where Fortunato screams and Montressor is taken back, trembling as he unsheathes a blade.
    Oh you covered the amontillado original later; and you covered the French wine, you made some really good points!

  • @bstm-2akristinecayev.cabat462
    @bstm-2akristinecayev.cabat462 4 года назад +82

    This is the most understandable review about The Cast of Amontillado❤

  • @bilalkawsara9539
    @bilalkawsara9539 3 года назад +23

    Great video! Once my brain is dead from studying I like listening to analysis videos to stretch my studying a bit longer. I really enjoyed this, a lot more than Fortunato enjoyed this, thanks for posting Carrie!

  • @llunathelynx
    @llunathelynx Год назад +4

    this is the most detailed and satisfying review of this story ive seen! great stuff, thanks

  • @ourphilosophyis9119
    @ourphilosophyis9119 4 месяца назад +1

    I can’t express fully how appreciative I am of this analysis. It’s as insightful as it is thorough. You touched on quite a number of things I hadn’t even thought of, like the possibility of him being denied admittance into the society of the masons, or the “rest in peace” possibly referring to the narrator. You’ve shed some modern light on Poe, which I’m really appreciative of because his works are so worthy of that kind of attention. You know, i actually was just reading The Black Cat this morning, so that parallel stuck out to me as well. I really look forward to seeking out more videos like this on this channel. Such great work. Thanks!

  • @guardiandevil0556
    @guardiandevil0556 Год назад +4

    This is my favorite story by Poe, thank you so much for doing this video :D

  • @tee_sutton
    @tee_sutton 2 года назад +4

    THANK YOU for your analysis on this story!

  • @teacherreadtous4273
    @teacherreadtous4273 2 года назад +2

    That was the BEDT breakdown of Cask of Amontillado I have heard or seen. Perfecto! Subscribed!

  • @lq8242
    @lq8242 Год назад +2

    Watching your videos as I watch Flanagn's The Fall of the House of Usher to refresh my high school memories for the literary references!
    Your videos are perfect to give me as much detail as I need to appreciate the references and think a bit more deeply about the symbolism without having to reread each story!
    Thanks for what you are doing!

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  Год назад +1

      I've been watching the miniseries, too! So far I think he's done a great job!

  • @imanaryafar4803
    @imanaryafar4803 2 года назад +2

    The best analysis I have ever seen

  • @judditmore2701
    @judditmore2701 2 года назад +3

    My favorite short story by Poe, thanks for the video!

    • @PhantomMagician1846
      @PhantomMagician1846 2 года назад

      mine too

    • @guayabito6946
      @guayabito6946 Год назад

      I don't see what the big deal is. I was waiting for the twist in the end and there was none.

    • @P0rk_Sinigang
      @P0rk_Sinigang Год назад +1

      ​@@guayabito6946It's not building to a twist, it's a steady simmer to a satisfying little treat.

  • @shirley7577
    @shirley7577 3 года назад +10

    Excellent insight and summary Carrie! Thank you!

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  3 года назад +3

      Thank you for watching! I hope it was helpful!

  • @PhantomMagician1846
    @PhantomMagician1846 2 года назад +2

    This is one of my fav Poe stories

  • @catsrwonderful
    @catsrwonderful 2 года назад +2

    Thank you, I have a test with written responses tomorrow and this is very helpful.

  • @mohammedmifdal419
    @mohammedmifdal419 3 года назад +7

    What an explanation, what facial expressions when you explain, your are awesome , thank you

  • @farah_nm162
    @farah_nm162 9 месяцев назад +1

    Can you please do more short stories by Edgar Allan Poe?? Your other videos were so interesting and easy to understand, I really hope you make more analytical videos on Poe's other short stories✨️

  • @TeenStoryTime
    @TeenStoryTime 3 года назад +6

    An excellent interpretation. Thanks for the assistance!

  • @durga1belbase
    @durga1belbase 6 месяцев назад

    i appreciate your art of telling a story ,i really liked

  • @PaulHoyt-xj7nf
    @PaulHoyt-xj7nf 2 года назад

    Terrific video for anyone pleasure reading, studying, or teaching this short story by Edgar Allan Poe, The Cask of Amontillado. Beautifully described and interpreted. This should be very helpful for anyone desiring an excellent detailed description of this story.

  • @khellajoypascual1099
    @khellajoypascual1099 3 года назад +6

    This helps a lot. I will be reporting tomorrow about this piece. Thank you so much

  • @LilyLily-sl5vm
    @LilyLily-sl5vm 3 года назад +6

    This was honestly so helpful thx :)

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  3 года назад +1

      I'm so glad it helped! Thanks for watching!

  • @bernardnegrin2504
    @bernardnegrin2504 2 года назад +1

    Excellent summary and analysis!

  • @bjanko700
    @bjanko700 Год назад

    Fantastic breakdown and summary! :) Very helpful!

  • @koozeyyy
    @koozeyyy 3 года назад +6

    Thank you, reading it didn't help me understand but listening to you tell it like a normal story helped me get the rest

  • @Industen
    @Industen 3 года назад +16

    I would not be surprised if Poe actually put bodies behind structures in his existence. Cask, Black Cat,Tell Tale, all proud men who subconsciously admitted or confessed in years forward to boost about their acts. One committed a perfect crime, one just teased authority with impunity, and one just insane. He covered all angles within his(Poe) complex psyche...maybe he had the last laugh through his writing. Author...or a personal diary......

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  3 года назад +7

      "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" is another story that features something similar.

  • @ba-karaktrat
    @ba-karaktrat 2 года назад +3

    I love the way you told us the story ❤️
    Thank you for helping me through my studies... Good luck

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  2 года назад +1

      Good luck to you!

    • @ba-karaktrat
      @ba-karaktrat 2 года назад

      @@CarrieHoover Tomorrow is my final exam of the course so thank you for your wishes ❤️

    • @ba-karaktrat
      @ba-karaktrat 2 года назад +1

      @@CarrieHoover I forgot to tell you!!
      I have scored A+ average in the course!! Thanks for your help ❤️

  • @johnpalmer2677
    @johnpalmer2677 3 года назад +6

    Also, great job. Please do more Poe.

  • @ezylann83
    @ezylann83 Год назад

    Thank you so much I've been putting off an assignment for this for so long! because it's so difficult on the grammar the story used so you breaking in down in an understandable way really helped me!! ♥♥

  • @daleyoung5635
    @daleyoung5635 2 года назад +1

    Very nice very helpful very clear thank you

  • @HALEY0861
    @HALEY0861 2 года назад

    Wonderful! I enjoy listening to your analysis.

  • @Mr.Fancycouch
    @Mr.Fancycouch 2 года назад +1

    Thank you so much for this video!

  • @dianadelarosa7794
    @dianadelarosa7794 3 года назад +2

    This was super helpful! Couldn’t help but picture Fortunado getting trapped in your brick fireplace! Lol

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  3 года назад +1

      Lol, I’d never thought of that!

  • @josemanuelmascarenas9149
    @josemanuelmascarenas9149 3 года назад +7

    Do you have a video on Poe's The Raven? I would really like to hear a review on that story, one of my favorites

  • @adrianasmr1963
    @adrianasmr1963 3 года назад +3

    thank you so much! this helped a lot!! :)

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  3 года назад

      I'm glad it helped! Thanks for watching!

  • @PatrickPrejusa
    @PatrickPrejusa 2 года назад

    YOU ARE AMAZING i love your videos

  • @markelsuperbueno8126
    @markelsuperbueno8126 3 года назад +2

    You are great keep it going please!

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  3 года назад +3

      I hope it was helpful!

    • @markelsuperbueno8126
      @markelsuperbueno8126 3 года назад +3

      @@CarrieHoover i was working on an essay. Although I've read the story like a hundred times it helped to play your video as I was writing my final draft. Helped keep me focused. Kept my thoughts organized. Very helpful

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  3 года назад +3

      @@markelsuperbueno8126 Awesome!

  • @vivianaferrer7877
    @vivianaferrer7877 3 года назад +6

    I would love to hear some analysis of Guy de Maupassant and his style of writing.

  • @lahmacunseverbiri
    @lahmacunseverbiri 14 дней назад

    THANKS A LOT 😊🧡

  • @daleandrews3552
    @daleandrews3552 3 года назад +1

    A "liker" and subscriber here. Excellent breakdown of this timeless masterpiece by Poe. Poe is similar to Stephen King in that his devious mind is revealed in his work. Someone who could just conjure up a scheme like this and put it down on paper has GOT to be a bit twisted, I think. Someone who could even have THOUGHTS like that! Please let me know your thoughts on that take on it. You've got an excellent channel here. I'm glad I found it.

    • @robertgallagher5285
      @robertgallagher5285 Год назад +1

      Thought the same thing the beach drowning scene in Stephen King's Creepshow movie based on this how he helps him yell showing it is futile because noone will hear!!!!

  • @drdemon6914
    @drdemon6914 Год назад

    with analysis it made story more realisitic , knowing some cues was wonderful . I was just wondering any writer should have given any one piece of insult that " single " that even seperated from all those accumulated insults would be enough for igniting immolation. Fair would be for audience.
    But i think i have found after your analysis what i like to add is:
    Same situation repeated again. In plazzo where he was lonely from the start but Masons like fortunado had not made him their part leading him to be lonely separated, so even in carnival he felt caged in plazzo.Then later situation repeated but place was changed.
    Write gave the choice to choose retribution of any kind or feel same as wrong doer while wrong doing.
    By caging him he redressed.

  • @durga1belbase
    @durga1belbase 6 месяцев назад

    very interesting

  • @jenr3840
    @jenr3840 3 года назад +2

    This is so helpful. Do you have any videos on Hemingway?

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  3 года назад +1

      Not yet, but it’s on the list! Do you have any favorites?

  • @margaretevanmierlokors712
    @margaretevanmierlokors712 3 года назад

    I would love to see you talking about the short story In the South, by Salmon Rushdie.

  • @ghook6987
    @ghook6987 2 года назад +3

    How about 'Ligeia'?

  • @lonjasgordas4186
    @lonjasgordas4186 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for this

  • @catherinecao4810
    @catherinecao4810 3 года назад +2

    Since Montessor knows how to use a chain and build a wall, he must have been forced to take up some manual labor

  • @farrahfarrah543
    @farrahfarrah543 3 года назад +1

    Thank You !

  • @rjmacready8830
    @rjmacready8830 3 года назад +2

    In Genesis the heel crushing the serpent is a prophecy of Christ (the woman's seed) crushing Satan after he bites Christ (the crucifixion). When Fortunato says "For the love of God!" Montressor replies "Yes-for the love of God!" perhaps Montresor feels he is reclaiming his family birhright, i.e. God favors Montressor's vengeance. Thank you for an outstanding lesson!

    • @scottlloyd9558
      @scottlloyd9558 3 года назад

      It seems an allusion to Fortunato injuring Montressor but Montressor ultimately destroying Fortunato and having the final triumph (in his own view). Definitely a Biblical allusion, twisted though it be.

  • @johnnyxmusic
    @johnnyxmusic 3 года назад +1

    Very nice!

  • @suhnoella5158
    @suhnoella5158 2 года назад

    Hi love ur summary of the cast of amontillado its really brief n will like to know if u can help me with the way of the warld by William Congreve . thanks

  • @timmy18135
    @timmy18135 2 года назад

    Could you do Morella

  • @adamwilliams3963
    @adamwilliams3963 3 года назад +3

    Great job! But how do we know that Fortunato DIDN'T die from his cough?

    • @josharguello4313
      @josharguello4313 Год назад

      Even if that was the case, the cold and dampness of the vault would have accelerated his illness. The fact that he had no food or drink would also make him weak and vulnerable to his illness. Montresor set all the pieces in motion to dispose of his frenemy efficiently. Plus dying of a cold that turns into pneumonia in those circumstances would not be a pretty or clean death.

  • @josharguello4313
    @josharguello4313 Год назад

    The Cask of Amontillado is my favorite story by Edgar Allan Poe. It's the perfect revenge story, and a perfect murder. Montresor weaves a very fine cobweb for the innocent little fly Fortunato, who has no idea he is headed towards his doom. Despite the lack of outward violence or gore, Montresor murders Fortunato in a very cold and cruel way. Not only is he relishing in Fortunato's fear and desperation as he slowly starts to sober up, but he also knows that Fortunato will experience a slow and agonizing death. He insures that Fortunato will suffer immensely until his last breath. And the best part is that Montresor not only got away with it but he feels no guilt or remorse. Quite the contrary, he seems quite please with himself.

  • @saulebdalin4809
    @saulebdalin4809 12 дней назад

    How about morela😊

  • @govindanvr7627
    @govindanvr7627 Год назад

    very nice

  • @michaelnoonan352
    @michaelnoonan352 2 года назад +2

    I've written an unusual mystery story, entitled HAZARD ON THE LOOSE - which can be found in a volume of my stories entitled SEVEN TALL TALES; available at Amazon as a book or kindle - which you may be interested in; and which bears some similarities to The Cask of Amontillado; in that the denouement takes place in the wine cellar of an old house, where two keen wine buffs are seemingly intent on sampling some fine old vintages. The tale concerns a businessman, by the name of Jack Hazard, who breaks out of jail, with outside help, after serving five years of a fifteen year sentence. He had already promised to murder the four executives that he claimed had deliberately framed him up and saw him sentenced on entirely trumped up charges. One by one they are tracked down and murdered; until only two of the four remain. One of the remaining two hires the services of two private detectives, to add to the police protection he has already. Though it is assumed by most people that Hazard is the murderer the private detectives voice their doubts about this and reason that Hazard would be far too focused on keeping a low profile and avoiding recapture - as a large police force is dedicated to that purpose - to pursue some bizarre revenge vendetta. Will events prove them right? But if it isn't Hazard, then who is the actual killer? Could you guess? Happy listening, and reading.

  • @devinazevedo1122
    @devinazevedo1122 3 года назад

    Where was this book when I was in school

  • @opa_plays_mw5318
    @opa_plays_mw5318 Год назад

    My 7th grader got this in week 2, online it says this is a grade 9-11? He's having a hard time with the concepts.

  • @johnpalmer2677
    @johnpalmer2677 3 года назад +4

    Isn’t Fortunato chained around the waist, not the wrist?

  • @benhuether5474
    @benhuether5474 Год назад

    Do The Outsider by H.P. Lovecraft

  • @a_lucientes
    @a_lucientes 11 месяцев назад

    I know Poe disliked allegory (or write as much anyway), but it's difficult to read this tale without it coming across as one. Fortunato is life (i.e, Fortuna * although it translates as 'fortune; it does not necessarily imply good fortune. Simply the _whims of fortune)._ Which is why Fortune knows his soul so well and caused him so many past harms. Dressed as a trickster, this supposed man of power (Life itself) is revealed more so as an easily manipulated clown. Deeper into the bowels of the earth he is led, where he is at once entombed while still alive. A scenario somewhat analogous to the human condition in general. With his senses dulled ("& a fire in his eyes') Montessor (a name associated w/ learning) leads Fortunato deeper and deeper w/ the promise of the coveted Amontillado; appealing to him as much for the additional drink as to settle the question of its authenticity, that his knowledge alone is capable of determining. Once chained to the wall the bricks can be seen as the moments/years of time, helplessly draining away in front of the living victim. Poor Fortunato is so deluded, denial prevents him from seeing his reality. Until the very end, when the final brick is placed, he is still laughing about what a great story it will make. **I stopped. midway to write this comment. Im gonna feel pretty silly if in the 2nd half you say something similar. chrs.

  • @davidrussell4104
    @davidrussell4104 2 года назад

    Did people really break the bottle neck like he did with the Medoc? Good way to swallow glass it seems.

  • @WhatelsecouldIsayhomey
    @WhatelsecouldIsayhomey 3 года назад

    Good video

  • @dmm3124
    @dmm3124 3 года назад +3

    Amontillado is a Spanish sherry, not an Italian wine.

  • @jmm1233
    @jmm1233 2 года назад

    The sad story of Henry

  • @turkey-z2d
    @turkey-z2d Год назад +2

    i love carrie hoover

  • @rajbirkaur7528
    @rajbirkaur7528 Год назад

    ❤❤

  • @benhuether5474
    @benhuether5474 Год назад

    Do Call of Cthulhu 🐙

  • @catherinecao4810
    @catherinecao4810 2 года назад +2

    I actually had a taste of amontillado.
    This is my personal opinion, but I think it’s overrated. It’s not worth dying for.

    • @CarrieHoover
      @CarrieHoover  2 года назад +1

      I've never tried it, but I can't think of any beverage that could be worth crawling through a burial crypt.

    • @catherinecao4810
      @catherinecao4810 2 года назад

      @@CarrieHoover maybe the elixir of life, but it would have to be a really good sales pitch

  • @devinazevedo1122
    @devinazevedo1122 3 года назад

    You should read out adult books as well

  • @crewcut4
    @crewcut4 2 года назад

    "Amontillado" is actually a very expensive Spanish wine, not Italian. The very pronunciation should have told you that.

    • @thomasdunn16
      @thomasdunn16 2 года назад +2

      Who are you referring to? The speaker acknowledges that amontillado is a Spanish wine. In fact, the discussion of amontillado in the story is another example of irony. It allows Montresor to say that he’s as much an expert in the Italian vintages as Fortunato…who obviously is not an expert because he doesn’t know amontillado is sherry. So Montresor is acknowledging his own ignorance through the irony of comparing his knowledge to Fortunato’s obvious lack of expertise. Very very clever of Poe. And a great way to demonstrate details about both characters without being obvious.

    • @worldwidefunnyguy
      @worldwidefunnyguy Год назад

      watch the whole video before critiquing it

  • @wiledwards4372
    @wiledwards4372 Год назад

    Fauknér. Pleàse

  • @parameswaranparamesh8827
    @parameswaranparamesh8827 2 года назад

    Make some slow....y haste dear Mam....

  • @doddshay9019
    @doddshay9019 3 года назад

    Haha rest in pieces!