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Blackwood Farm : The Vampire Chronicles

Blackwood Farm : The Vampire Chronicles

List Price: $39.95
Your Price: $25.17
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Blackwood Farm
Review: This book is excellent. The more you read the more you find that you can't put it down. I was so excited when the book first came out and yes it lived up to all of the excitement.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Tale To Die For
Review: Tarquin (Quin) Blackwood, a newly created vampire, appeals to Lestat for help when his spirit friend Goblin starts attacking him for blood and becomes more corporeal. He fears Goblin's power and the effect he could have on the world, especially after he causes the death of a family member with the powerful Lestat in the house.

Tarquin could see and communicate with spirits before he was turned. Usually this power disappears when a person is turned but Quin retained this ability. Most of the book is Tarquin telling Lestat about his life. He fascinates Lestat, who sits quietly during his very vivid tale.

The Vampire Chronicles and the Mayfair Witches cross paths As Quin falls in love with a desperately ill Mona Mayfair on first site forcing him to take a drastic measure to save her life.

Rice is a master at creating these rich old southern families with skeletons in their closets completely immersing the reader in this fictional world. She kept me guessing about the origins of the spirit Goblin until the very end of the novel. I simply couldn't put Blackwood Farm down. It's a long book so be sure that you have time to savor it once you've begun it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Better Than I Expected
Review: I've been increasingly disappointed in Anne Rice's books. It seems that she, like many authors, is wonderful at starting an engrossing series and less able to continue with it. _Blackwood Farm_, however, harkens back to some of her eariler work lends fresh blood (heh heh) to the Vampire Chronicles.

Quinn Blackwood, a young (both in human age and in terms of his "change") vampire, has a problem. As long as he can remember, he's been haunted by a sometimes loving and sometimes malicious spirit whom he calls Goblin. Since Quinn's change, Goblin has become more sinister and more powerful. Quinn seeks out the most famous and powerful vampire he knows of -- Lestat, in quite a good cameo role -- to help him put an end to the spirit who is threatening Quinn's mortal friends and relations.

What I liked best about this book is that it's essentially Quinn's tale of growing up among the people and ghosts of a rich southern family -- a family with its own mysteries and legends. The characterization of people, spirits and place is deftly handled. In fact, this is one of the things I think Anne Rice does best: weaving character and setting together into a specific atmosphere, and I was glad to see her get back to it after neglecting the practice in her last few novels.

I also liked the way she brought together her two major New Orleans mythologies -- the Vampires and the Mayfairs (although it still seems a bit contrived to me, the way that everyone seems to be a member of one or the other group.) I was glad to see what became of Mona Mayfair, as well as Rowan and Michael. I think, however, that it would be difficult to understand everything that was going on without having read the three Mayfair Witches books; a lot of reference was made to the events in those and I know I would have been confused and distracted had I not read them.

Another thing I liked was that in _Blackwood Farm_, Rice relies a lot less on the same old tired vampiric events to move the story along. Not only is Quinn a new vampire completely unrelated to and even (for the most part) unaware of the vampires we know from former books, but also his transformation doesn't take place until relatively late in the story. So there's quite a bit less of the Blood-Hunt-Identity Crisis-Yikes I'm Immortal! flavour of some of the more recent vampire chronicles.

We still have the requisite Scholarly Tweedy Englishman of a Certain Age to represent the Talamasca. And we're still dealing with people who, even as mortals, have more money than God, which sometimes makes the story hard to swallow. (I wish sometimes we could follow the adventures of a working class vampire who was not so ready to give up his culture of origin.)The predictable ending gets points for getting rid of a character who never should have existed in the first place but loses some points for transforming yet another interesting mortal.

On the whole, though, I liked _Blackwood Farm_. It actually reminded me of _Interview with a Vampire_ more than any of the other books. I think most people who like Anne Rice will enjoy it.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: been done before, been done better
Review: There was a time when I was an avid fan of Anne Rice's work. I love the Mayfair Witches and the Vampire Chronicles. This work just didn't do it for me. I liked it slightly because I am a big fan of gothic stories and it's nice to know what it going on in the current lives of the Mayfair Witches but mostly Rice is just going over old material, stuff that's been done before by her and done better by her.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Satisfying Read
Review: The meeting of the vampires and the Mayfairs was bound to happen. I liked the tying together of the stories. I also liked that the story lacked the annoying theological struggles. The only reason I didn't give it 5 stars was because I think the plot was a tad choppy and the characters a bit saccharine and unreal. But all in all it was very satisfying. I can't wait for the next one!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not bad at all
Review: It was with some trepidation that I started Blackwood Farm, since the last few entries in the Vampire Chronicles were kind of weak, especially compared to the earliest ones. But I was pleasantly surprised. What I liked best about it was what the most recent previous reviewers seemed to object to the most. It was't about Lestat whose only role is basically that of an audience to the story of young Quinn Blackwood's life as Quinn relates it to Lestat whom he has awakened in order to ask for help in getting rid of an increasingly malignant spirit.

This is clearly the begining of a new story line that I expect will continue for one or more additional books in which Rice intends to marry (perhaps literally) the Vampire Chronicles with the Mayfair witch saga. I liked it and look forward to the continuation.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Anne Rice has out did herself again
Review: I personaly think that Anne Rice has out did herself again. Blending the ghost with the witch and vampire sent chills down my spine. The book truely transends the macabe and takes it to a whole new level of terror. The characters,especially Quinn, give a vibrant but sorted history into a word of parties, laughter and what is inside of us all. That little wish that we all could have a goblin to play with when times are hard and no one cares. Looking forward to her final and what I believe will be her greatest book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Looking for Lestat? You won't find him here..
Review: So this starts out okay, Quinn looking for Lestat and afraid to step foot in New Orleans. And then here he comes, *My* Lestat. But wait, who is this humble, wizened Vampire? Surely it's not him.. But yes, unfortunately. He has now lost his "pointy" edge and has become almost fatherly. Gag me.. Quickly!

So we go through the story of Quinn and his life in this huge house by the swamp and learn of all these characters and family members and his unfortunate ghost Goblin. Of course he's thought of as crazy, but really, what sane person in an Anne Rice novel *doesn't* talk to ghosts or see spirits?? But moving on.

I found she wasn't as tedious in her descriptions as she has been in her past books. But I saw all the foreshadowing for future books, I'm assuming, in this book blinking out at me from neon lights almost. Lestat has a tale he hasn't told, new vampire, old vamps we've never heard of.. Do I hear "money" in any of this?

But finally at the end, when Quinn gets done telling his story, I think, oh goodie, Lestat! But sadly no.. He still seems to be Mr. Goody-Two-Shoes. I don't think he had any good lines, except for the one of him not admiring himself in the mirror, and I think he had one more, about Quinn finding him a nuisance. But that was it. So disappointing.

The one thing I didn't like in this book was all these people having intimate relations with whomever or WHATever, falling in love with everything, and had such boring personalities. Including Lestat!!

So whenever she decides to write about the Lestat that we know and love, I'll read it.. I just hope it's soon. How about one with him and Marius again, like they were at the end of QOTD??

But this book had some story to it, and I kinda liked it.. I just don't think I'd read it 20 times like I have QOTD and BT.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thank you Anne!
Review: I am so thankful for Blackwood Farm! I read it in three hours, I could not put it down! I love all the new characters, I was so happy to see Lestat again, even if only for a little while. Not to mention my pleasure at catching up with Mona Mayfair and good old Oncle Julien! I loved the ending and I look forward to many more vampire books to come. If you are a true Anne Rice fan, you will love this book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Vampires, Witches, Ghosts...oh my!
Review: In the latest edition of the Vampire Chronicles, Anne Rice introduces us to a fledging vampire named Tarquinn, "Quinn". What ever happened to Lestat? Now in the beginning of the book Quinn is seeking out Lestat to help him with a little problem he has with a ghost. I enjoyed reading this book and it was hard pulling myself away... it was a real page turner. I can understand Rice wanting to expand the the Blood Drinkers Universe by creating stories about the other vampires besides Lestat. However, how much is too much? In this book she does not only introduce us to Quinn but those blood drinkers that made him and a new vampire that is created in this book.

Rice does a lot of foreshadowing in this book, so much so that is gets too predictable. I can see at least three new books from this one if Rice chooses to go on to further write about these ideas presented in Blackwood Farm. But what is needed is another book soley devoted to Lestat...this book is not it. It is devoted to Quinn and his problem ghost. Now instead of writing a new book devoted to the Mayfair Witch Clan, Rice throws their story line more so in this book (I have not read Merrick). So the story if the Mayfairs and the Blood Drinkers are more closely related in this book. Of course it was only a matter of time that more of the Mayfairs became blood drinkers due to the fact that Julien Mayfair had sired half of the population in New Orleans. I don't think this character had enough time in his long life to wear any clothes due to the many childern he has fathered. I digress.

Back to the book at hand. Blackwood Farm gives a deatiled account of Quinn's life before becoming a blood drinker at his ancestral home Blackwood Manor and the mysterious Sugar Devil Island. Roughly 80% of the book is devoted to Quinn's growing up and his experience with his "Goblin" (a imaginary friend that is not so imaginary). It is with Goblin that Quinn starts having problems before vampirehood then turns into a bigger problem once Quinn returns home from a three year stint in Europe and is given the Dark Gift. Goblin is the reason why Lestat is called in for helping Quinn. Which he does, how could he not help the loveable Quinn?

If you enjoy reading about the other Vampires besides Lestat I recommend the book. If you are looking for more of the Vampire Lestat, this is not one of those books. This book will not give you any indepth information on what happened to Lestat as he was laying on the floor in a coma like state. Although I think I can make an educated guess that Rice will write about that in an up coming book? Over all opion is you are going to love it or hate it, but there is only one way of knowing for sure and that is too read the book.


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