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                <text>Type is all around us. This is a collection focused on that.</text>
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          Poe wrote in the early nineteenth century, and is known for works of dark romanticism and gothic horror, both genres characterized in part by extravagance, fascination with the past, and intense emotion, all of which are alluded to in the typeface and arrangement of the text. Most of the text is in an especially elaborate serif font. The author's name is arranged nonlinearly, with his surname significantly larger and in contrasting dramatic red, and the first part of his name inside – while one can figure out the "proper" order, this arrangement means one is likely to see and place importance on the name "Poe."&#13;
          Writing almost a century later, Lovecraft combined sensibilities of gothic horror with science fiction, dealing with themes of forbidden and dangerous knowledge. His works can be seen as a reaction against the dangers of modernity and scientism. The book cover illustrates this with striking, bold geometric shapes and serif font, characteristic of modern styles that hoped to express progress. To interrupt this otherwise perfectly modernist design, the cover is cut in half by a dark nebulous void, which also splits the author's name from "The Complete Fiction."</text>
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