Interview with the Vampire
discussion
Would you recommend this series?

Thank you.

I agr..."
I love books I really do, but I threw Tale of the Body Thief against a wall.
Having said that about the series, I might suggest you read around the seris too. My favourate book is Pandora. She is such an interesting character, and it is a really well written book.
I also read and HATED Anne Rice's witch book of New Orleans. It started out great (I like it when witches are the good guys) and by the end became a very born again rant against anything but Christianity. It didn't make sense, the charaters just warped and morphed and I hated it.
Anne Rice's earlier work and even Tale of the Body Thief had it's redeeming momments, but her later stuff was so unrecognisabley BAD and it lost all her colour pallet (which I love) and her sense of perfum to draw you into the world.

I do have the entire collection of these books however and couldn't part with a single one.
These vampires are not nice, there are some horrible parts and there is a lot of soul serching and there is a lot of grit.
the only reason these vampires may try to seduce you is to take your blood. they will not fall in love with you.
There is a lot of history in these books and a lot of cross refrences and a whole world is created.

*The Vampire Chronicles
Interview with the Vampire (1976)
The Vampire Lestat (1985)
The Queen of the Damned (1988)
The Tale of the Body Thief (1992)
Memnoch the Devil (1995)
The Vampire Armand (1998)
Merrick (2000)
Blood and Gold (2001)
Blackwood Farm (2002)
Blood Canticle (2003)
* New Tales of the Vampires
Pandora (1998)
Vittorio the Vampire (1999)
* Lives of the Mayfair Witches
The Witching Hour (1990)
Lasher (1993)
Taltos (1994)

I was 12 when I read interview with the vampire


Anne Rice also wrote several historical novels, even before these, "Feast of All Saints" is my personal favorite. I stopped reading her newer stuff several years ago, just found that things started to be very repetitive.
Hope this helps!

Eternal Hunger


The first two books are very similar, same basic story, two different perspectives. Queen of the Damned is a hot mess full of characters. I liked her Witching Hour series better.





I would recommend reading "Interview with the Vampire" only.

"Interview with the Vampire" was the first novel I have ever read cover to cover and I fell in love with the characters instantly.


I will admit to thinking Blackwood Farm was just silly, though. And I couldn't even finish Blood Canticle... I'm a fan of the earlier books in the series.


If no one answered this for you yet, as it looks like you are yet to read it, the answer is YES, with big glittery bells on,

So I cannot comment on this book, however, I can comment on all the following books. Excellent. I like how the stories go on and on.
I would not recommend for the light or faint hearted readers, but for readers who enjoy a good story regardless of whether it is scary or not.

It would be awesome if they made a Witching Hour movie.






When this came out Anne helped to renew the vampire in literature. I know its hard to believe, but there was a time when monsters, vampires,werewolves were not as popular as they are today.
Now there is a glut of vampire stories, some horrible some good, but Anne Rice should be a staple on any vampire lovers book shelf.
I thought the story was original and fresh and progressed nicely till the Queen of the Damned. That was the last one I read I think.


I considered Rice's vampires to be too soft, too emo and too whiny. I never thought that there will come a day when they'll look tough :-)))

Rice truly destroyed the vicious image of the vampire and opened the door for cheap vampire soft porn novels. "The sexy vampire?" PLEASE!!!!"
Ke..."
I second that. If vampire looks appealing, it's not scary anymore.

My favorite, hands down, is Memnoch the Devil. All the characters are enduring with unique and lively personalities. The stories really jump off the page and Anne Rice paints a vibrant picture in the reader's mind.
People who don't appreciate the series: religious zealouts and/or haters. Try not to drink any Hater-aide before you read them and you'll be sure to enjoy them. (also, don't ruin them by watching the movies. especially Queen of the Damned, which was very loosely based on the second and third books in this series. Anne Rice didn't even endorse that movie.)


Might be. Maybe we expect different things from vampires. Guys want horror, girls want romance.

Also "liking this" Renee you said it best! Just because these vampires were pretty didnt mean they were not evil...they did a good share of killing. These books open me up to parnormal
Lestat De Lioncourt
"Evil is a point of view," "We are immortal. And what we have before us are the rich feasts that conscience cannot appreciate and mortal men cannot know without regret. God kills, and so shall we; indiscriminately He takes the richest and the poorest, and so shall we; for no creatures under God are as we are, none so like Him as ourselves,"


Interview with the Vampire (the movie) is excellent. Queen of the Damned (the movie) BOMBED, which is really sad considering the book is amazing. But they tried to blend The Vampire Lestat (which deserves its own movie) with Queen of the Damned. And Queen of the Damned had so much content they couldn't fit it all into one movie. Plus, they got the ending wrong. So, in my opinion, they MURDERED Queen of the Damned. I mean, couldn't they at least get a REAL red head to play the lead, Jesse?
Look, the book gives a detailed explaination of where Vampires come from, who the first Vampires are, and why they exist. The movie touches on none of that.
And in my opinion, Tom Cruise played a much more convincing role of Lestat than Stewart Townsend ever dreamed. Its only saving grace: Aaliyah is hot and sexy in her final role before she died in 2001.
Don't believe me? Ask Anne Rice: http://www.facebook.com/search/result...

For the record, Anne Rice herself said of Queen of the Damned - the movie, and I quote, "It was a disaster."
http://www.facebook.com/#!/annericefa...


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Overall, outside of Anita Blake, I don't see how anyone can understand modern vampire "literature" if that's even appropriate next to Rice's works, without this series. I wish she'd write more Lestat to give Jean Claude, Eric Northman, and others a run for their money.