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Anne Rice : The Vampire Lestat (The Vampire Chronicles, Book 2)
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Author: Anne Rice
Title: The Vampire Lestat (The Vampire Chronicles, Book 2)
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Published in: English
Binding: Hardcover
Pages: 560
Date: 1993-10-01
ISBN: 0833563521
Publisher: Turtleback
Weight: 0.69 pounds
Size: 1.12 x x 1.87 centimeters
Amazon prices:
$11.68used
$11.69new
$18.40Amazon
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Wishlists:
2ayaneyuki (Singapore), Cetta (USA: OH).
Description: Product Description
FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Lestat has risen from his long sleep as a modern day rock star and makes public his story of boyhood in eighteenth-century France and initiation into vampiredom.


Amazon.com Review
After the spectacular debut of Interview with the Vampire in 1976, Anne Rice put aside her vampires to explore other literary interests--Italian castrati in Cry to Heaven and the Free People of Color in The Feast of All Saints. But Lestat, the mischievous creator of Louis in Interview, finally emerged to tell his own story in the 1985 sequel, The Vampire Lestat.

As with the first book in the series, the novel begins with a frame narrative. After over a half century underground, Lestat awakens in the 1980s to the cacophony of electronic sounds and images that characterizes the MTV generation. Particularly, he is captivated by a fledgling rock band named Satan's Night Out. Determined both to achieve international fame and end the centuries of self-imposed vampire silence, Lestat takes command of the band (now renamed "The Vampire Lestat") and pens his own autobiography. The remainder of the novel purports to be that autobiography: the vampire traces his mortal youth as the son of a marquis in pre-Revolutionary France, his initiation into vampirism at the hands of Magnus, and his quest for the ultimate origins of his undead species.

While very different from the first novel in the Vampire Chronicles, The Vampire Lestat has proved to be the foundation for a broader range of narratives than is possible from Louis's brooding, passive perspective. The character of Lestat is one of Rice's most complex and popular literary alter egos, and his Faustian strivings have a mythopoeic resonance that links the novel to a grand tradition of spiritual and supernatural fiction. --Patrick O'Kelley

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