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Loading... Interview with the Vampire: Anniversary edition (The vampire chronicles)by Anne RiceSeries: Vampire Chronicles (1)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I've read many vampire stories and this one drew me into the lush, decadent world of vampires; that which lurked in history's shadows. ( )I've read many vampire stories and this one drew me into the lush, decadent world of vampires; that which lurked in history's shadows. I read this in high school and enjoyed it, but wasn't impressed enough to follow up with the later novels or revisit the work until I recently took a class in horror literature, and examined this book as the first to really work at making a vampire sympathetic and central to a novel-length work. Coming back to it a decade later, I enjoyed it much more than expected. Besides being readable and unique, the book is a smart and focused read that Rice formed masterfully. For a fan of vampire lit., it's a must-read, but I'd recommend it to anyone who's interested in out-of-the-ordinary literature or uniquely developed narrators. Additionally, this is one of those books that delivers as much as you want it too; it's a pleasure to read for simple entertainment, but this isn't just a surface level read. The more you examine and reread this text, the richer it gets. I'm looking forward to following it up with the other books in the series. The first in the series of Ann Rice vampire chronicles - dark, sexy and compelling. I read this back in the '70's when it first came out. It is a wonderful vampire story. It keeps the vampires in the dark shadows but makes them human enough to be engaging. One of the best vampire books out there.
The publicity tells us Rice is "a dazzling storyteller." But there is no story here, only a series of sometimes effective but always essentially static tableaus out of Roger Corman films, and some self-conscious soliloquizing out of Spiderman comics, all wrapped in a ballooning, pompous language. Maybe the movie will be better, but the book is too superficial, too impersonal and too obviously made, to touch the sources of real terror and feeling. The author's seriousness is honest, I think, but misplaced; perhaps a bit more Grand Guignol elegance was called for father than incessant philosophizing. Immersed in the book's fetid, morbid atmosphere - like being in a hothouse full of decaying funeral lilies - one longs to get out in the garden.
Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0345337662, Mass Market Paperback)In the now-classic novel Interview with the Vampire, Anne Rice refreshed the archetypal vampire myth for a late-20th-century audience. The story is ostensibly a simple one: having suffered a tremendous personal loss, an 18th-century Louisiana plantation owner named Louis Pointe du Lac descends into an alcoholic stupor. At his emotional nadir, he is confronted by Lestat, a charismatic and powerful vampire who chooses Louis to be his fledgling. The two prey on innocents, give their "dark gift" to a young girl, and seek out others of their kind (notably the ancient vampire Armand) in Paris. But a summary of this story bypasses the central attractions of the novel. First and foremost, the method Rice chose to tell her tale--with Louis' first-person confession to a skeptical boy--transformed the vampire from a hideous predator into a highly sympathetic, seductive, and all-too-human figure. Second, by entering the experience of an immortal character, one raised with a deep Catholic faith, Rice was able to explore profound philosophical concerns--the nature of evil, the reality of death, and the limits of human perception--in ways not possible from the perspective of a more finite narrator.While Rice has continued to investigate history, faith, and philosophy in subsequent Vampire novels (including The Vampire Lestat, The Queen of the Damned, The Tale of the Body Thief, Memnoch the Devil, and The Vampire Armand), Interview remains a treasured masterpiece. It is that rare work that blends a childlike fascination for the supernatural with a profound vision of the human condition. --Patrick O'Kelley (retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 12:32:18 -0500) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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