If you know someone who doesn't like Edgar Allan Poe, make fun of him; then, check out this lesson plan about teaching suspense using "The Black Cat".
My dad liked teaching suspense. When I was 4-years-old, he'd turn off the lights, hide behind the couch, and scare me as I walked by. One day, I was carrying an axe up the cellar stairs. He thought he'd do the old "teaching suspense by hiding behind the couch, turning off the lights, and scaring my son" trick. That's when I buried the axe into his skull. I then drained his blood, chopped him up, and buried him under the floor boards of my bedroom. Don't tell my Mom. She thinks the old guy ran off with the woman down the street who also disappeared (I walled her up in the catacombs under my house).
Teaching 'The Black Cat" reminded me of those incidents.
Before reading and teaching "The Black Cat," I have students copy the following notes:
- suspense: anxiety or apprehension resulting from an uncertain, undecided, or mysterious situation
- pacing: advancing or developing something at a particular rate or tempo
- It takes a while to discover exactly what happened to that cat the narrator killed.
- dangerous action: self explanatory
- The narrator's violent moods creates trouble for everyone, including himself.
- foreshadowing: a literary device in which the author gives clues as to what will happen later
- We know the narrator has done something terrible. The story begins with him awaiting execution in a jail cell.