Bonus

An author described the murder of 8 men dressed as these animals by the title jester in the story “Hop-Frog.” For 10 points each:
[10h] In the story “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” C. Auguste Dupin discovers that the deaths of Madame L’Espanaye (“less-pah-NYE”) and her daughter were caused by one of what animals?
ANSWER: orangutans [or ourang-outangs; accept Pongo; prompt on great apes or primates; reject “monkeys”]
[10e] This author wrote the stories “Hop-Frog” and “The Murders in the Rue Morgue.” This author also described Fortunato’s one way trip into a wine cellar in “The Cask of Amontillado.”
ANSWER: Edgar Allan Poe
[10m] In another Poe story, a man with this surname becomes increasingly agitated while the narrator reads him The Mad Trist. That story ends with Madeline, a woman with this surname, scaring her brother Roderick to death.
ANSWER: Usher [accept Roderick Usher or Madeline Usher; accept “The Fall of the House of Usher”]
<Briticisers, American Literature>

EditionsHeardPPBEasy %Medium %Hard %
1139.2362%31%0%

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Conversion


Summary

TournamentEditionExact Match?HeardPPBEasy %Medium %Hard %
UK (North)UKY512.0080%40%0%
UK (South)UKY87.5050%25%0%
Northern CaliforniaUSN417.50100%50%25%
Southern CaliforniaUSN720.00100%86%14%
Eastern Canada (1)USN518.00100%60%20%
Eastern Canada (2)USN915.56100%56%0%
FloridaUSN420.00100%75%25%
Great LakesUSN1120.9191%91%27%
Lower Mid-AtlanticUSN918.89100%56%33%
Upper Mid-AtlanticUSN1217.5092%67%17%
MidwestUSN921.11100%56%56%
NorthUSN417.5075%75%25%
NortheastUSN1213.3392%42%0%
PacificUSN817.5075%50%50%
SoutheastUSN1318.4692%77%15%
Upstate NYUSN516.00100%40%20%