Interview with the Vampire
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Would you recommend this series?



I have written a better vampire story, may I share it with you? You can tell that it was inspired by Anne Rice. Here it is:
http://www.goodreads.com/story/show/3...
You are welcome :-p

Read one... if you love it, you'll probably love them all.
Plan B... I understand they will resurrect the series on the big screen, starting from scratch, with Robert Downey Jr. Taking on the roll of Lestat.
Reading the entire series a second time is on my bucket list.

The movie is what really got me into the books and if you're debating whether or not you want to devote your time to reading them I suggest you start with it but keep it mind it is a rather long movie.

I think that film is just someone's preference. I don't like it because every character look different to what I imagined, huge disappointment :(

I don't find the movie boring though I do know people who do so yeah it's not for everyone, but having not read the books first I had no real preconceptions on what the characters would look like. Though now it's hard to imagine Armand as a boy and not Antonio Banderas rofl I think everyone paints their own picture in their mind of characters appearances whilst reading and in any film adaption it's not quite what they imagined. In an interview Anne Rice did give her approval of the movie though.

yeah i agree with you
I didnt read any interviews of any author.
I just read A. Rice comment about it, so shocking






For me, other than Salems' Lot, there is no better vampire novel. The later books don't have the magic and sense of place Interview has, but Rice has a way with words.


And if you like them, keep going unt..."
I agree. I read the first Twilight book, because my grand daughter loved it. The series is not for adults.

Great post really sums up the books.
I loved the Interview of the Vampire and the Vampire Lestat, but I did not like the Queen of the Damned. I dropped the series from there. Other than that, I really liked the books!!!!! :D
yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Perfectly said. I read these back in high school, early to mid '90s, and they were powerful, so much so that they still stick with me and are the ultimate litmus test when reading books of this genre. I've been thinking about rereading them...




However . . .
I had assumed the vampire "series" stopped with Queen of the Damned.,. Per a previous post, I see that the "chronicles" seem to go on . . . and on.
For myself, I intend, at least, to complete the trilogy: Interview, Lestat, and Queen of the Damned.
And, despite the series going on, Rice did give us something new: an exploration of many questions readers would have since Stoker's Dracula.
So again, "yes."

The series, which for me ended with 'Tale of the Body Thief', were some of my favorite books when I was in my late teens.
Not sure, however, if they hold up.


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..."
Is this the suggested reading order? Been meaning to re-read the ones I have read, before going on to the ones I have not.


I liked the body thief one and I was saying 'come on Lestat, don't be a fool, your not going to see that guy again. This book also had the Talemascar in it, so I would recommend read the Mayfair witches books. They're good books, and I've also read them a few times as well.

Give it a try, you won't be sorry ;)





Rice truly destroyed the vicious image of the vampire and opened the door for cheap vampire soft porn novels. "The sexy vampire?" PLEASE!!!!"
I know that this comment is over a year old but I had to comment on it. Rice is not the first author to make vampires sexy. I'd say that trend started with Bram Stoker even though he was much more subtle about it.



Angie- The Wolf Gift was pretty good but I didn't like her Christ books. The idea behind them was good but she has a rather dark style of writing that gave them a super creepy feel.


Angie- The Wolf Gift was pretty good but I didn't like her Christ books. Th..."
Which ones are the Christ books?
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Ann Rice's great achievement in "Interview" was creating the characters of Louis, Lestat and Armand: three vampires who broke with every previous literary stereotype of vampire. Ann Rice's vampires had the same fears of aging and death as their human counterparts and Louis actually has ethical conflicts about killing humans to sustain his own immortality.
I'm pretty much fed up with the current glut of bad vampire books. We've actually gotten to the point where the vampires in Twilight are cute and cuddly creatures who resemble the Keaton family in the Eighties sitcom, "Family Ties."
It's been 36 years since Anne Rice wrote "Interview With a Vampire" and it's still a better book than any of the vampire themed books that have followed it.