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Blood Canticle

Blood Canticle

List Price: $29.95
Your Price: $18.87
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Back off
Review: First os all, this book was not a complete flop at all. some readers may very well have expected the exact same stlye and story type, but what no one is paying attention to is the fact that Anne rice stays very true to her perseption of each character. Rowan has become a weak desperate child, mona is still the stubborn brat, just learning to take herself differently. ECT. each character in this book has followed through in the course that they were set upon. stoy lines change, so do characters. stop comaring it to all her other works and take this one for what it is, a new chapater.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Why isn't there a "no star" rating?
Review: I am firmly convinced that some people would read anything that Anne Rice writes and praise it. The fact is, even the best authors have bad books. But the reason people are so down on this book is because this is the final insult in what has turned into a toboggan ride into hell for her work They have become increasingly formulaic and terribly written. Blood Canticle is just the absolute bottom of the barrel, and people aren't interested anymore in her writing. There is nothing redeemable about this dreck. You can defend it and you can look for all of the metaphors and subtext that you want, but it is simply a shockingly bad novel.

If this had been turned in by any other author, it would be at the bottom of a trash can. But Anne Rice is a brand, and they would publish anything she sends them. Why she has become so adamant in the assassination of her own career is beyond me. Perhaps she has become aware of something that has been evident to her fans since "Servant of the Bones": it's over. But instead of bowing out before she completely humiliates herself... she published "Blood Canticle". Well, I am glad this is it for the Vampires and the Witches, they have suffered enough. I am afraid to see what she decided to butcher in her next "novel".

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: What is your problem?
Review: Why do you people insist on ragging on this book? I agree that it wasn't her most amazing accomplishment, but it wasn't a flop. Not every novel can be The Vampire Lestat or Queen of the Damned.
I have been an avid Anne Rice fan for about five years when my aunt first turned me on to her books. And I haven't been able to stop reading them since. I have found such strength and passion in all of her works. There have been times where I have been angry or disappointed at the fate of a character, but that has never made me slander her books in the way that these reviews have.
One of her best qualities is that she allows the characters to speak for themselves. Lestat is not supposed to be the same in every novel. His greatest quality is the fact that he is so flippant and whimsical. He makes resolutions to change and yet he is always the same. That is his fate.
Mona was meant to be Claudia, the counterpart to Lestat's brat prince. But she could never overpower him because of who Lestat is.
I think that readers should focus more on what a book says and visual what is happening and not just wait for the author to spoon feed you the details. Grow up readers and then return to apologize to Anne Rice.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Quantity over Quality
Review: This book is the worst effort by Anne Rice. It feels like she phoned it in. I always hoped that she would merge the Vampire Chronicles with the Mayfair Saga. This is a sore disappointment. Lestat's quest for sainthood and his sudden passion for Rowan Mayfair are so far fetched it is almost funny. I will sincerely think twice before picking up another of Ms. Rice's books. Perhaps her genius departed with the unfortunate passing of Stan Rice. Maybe her stories could be more foreceful if she concentrated on one book per year like most other writers instead of cranking out two per year as has been the case lately. If you are contemplating reading this book, don't bother, save your time. This is the flop to end all flops.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Rock bottom
Review: With this book Rice completes her sad transformation from compelling gothic author to melodramatic hack. There have been many times over the years when I've wanted to throw an Anne Rice book across the room, but the sheer fascination of her mythos kept me coming back even through the most deadly books (of which Servant of the Bones is a prime contender). With her last book, Blackwood Farm, the writing was as purple and crammed with descriptions of furniture, clothing and architecture as ever, but after the first 100 pages of breathless description she took off with a story that was hilarious in its kitchen-sink, anything-goes byzantine plot. It may not have been good, but it was a juicy read. However, with it's follow-up, Blood Canticle, Rice has turned in what is probably the worst book of her career, and a pathetic close to the Vampire and Mayfair Witch sagas. The fact that she hasn't allowed an editor to change one word of her writing is a strong clue that she takes her dross for gold, but this tripe seems like the thinnest gruel of fan fiction. If there were such a thing as a Anne Rice drinking game where you did a shot for every time you read someone refer to another character as "darling", "dearest", "beloved" or "my love", her readers would all be in alcoholic comas. The woman can't write dialogue, and really never could...the difference is that she used to know it and restrict herself to narrative. Now, we get diatribes about the infallibility of the pope(!) and Lestat's babble about how he wants to be a saint. Demented claptrap! I'd have to agree with those who found the first 3 Vampire chronicles, along with Witching Hour and Lasher, to be Rice's finest inventions. Rice has stated recently that she no longer wants to write about her Vampires and Witches, and for those of us who care about the once fascinating brood this can only be long overdue news; the author has turned on her children and defiled them and their story in what seems clearly a delusional belief in her writing skill and voice. Better she should retire now, for she ran out of things to say a LONG time ago. RIP!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A sad but interesting end......
Review: While I have no words of harshness in this review I will agree to an extent with part of the review that someone wrote...

'Lestat, well, he's Anne Rice, not himself. He fully ceases to be his own character and instead becomes his author's mouthpiece.'

The opening chapter in particular echoed of things I have seen said in more recent interviews that were taken by Anne herself.
While I agree that the events of a persons life have some affect on how they see the world, in the past books Lestat has always remained Lestat, brat prince, in one way or another.

Anne has said that her Husband was the inspiration for the brat prince himself. And with the loss of her husband we also have the ironic loss of Lestat.

As far as books go, this is not a bad book. It still a interesting read. Just do not expect the lavishness and deep chapters of her previous books. Blackwood farm for me was such an amazing treat. It offered a new era, a new dawn. It was sad to go from that to this book, to see Mona reduced and Quinn playing 'tag along'.
Even more so for me because in 'Blackwood farm' I found Quinn to be her greatest character since Lestat himself.

Anne once was quoted as saying something along the lines of, (about the film Queen of the damned)

' Names are all that this production has in common with any of my books or characters. '

This seems to be the case of this book too. A book that only has the names of characters as being the only thing in common with her other work.

I hope that at a stronger point of her life, Anne will go back and realise that her chronicals deserve a greater ending this - while some may argue she owes it to her fans, I would rather argue that she owes it to herself. She can do better and does not deserve to be remembered with disapointment for this book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Tsk
Review: I just finished reading this book and I'm not entirely sure what to make of it. I was definitely disappointed by its quality, but I would say that my Anne Rice fandom has been falling off for quite some time. However, I don't feel that that invalidates my opinion but rather emphasizes it - I don't feel that this was so much a failure as a Vampire Chronicle as a failure as a novel.

As is previously mentioned, Lestat's language was a bit jarring. But I also agree that Lestat as a character is designed to be able to adapt to the times and new surroundings, and it seemed to me that he might have picked up a bit of vernacular in the span of his lifetime. That said, Anne Rice was definitely a few steps behind the "times." I almost clawed my eyes out at the use of "yo" and "dude." I absolutely abhor it when writers attempt to integrate language of that sort into writing and fail miserably. And I must confess, I have never thought that Anne was particuarly good at that anyway - the language she writes for Jasmine and the other black characters always seems forced and unrealistic, especially in this book. Very poor.

Point blank Mona annoyed me. I was willing to tolerate Lestat working the Dark Trick on her, with faith that it would work out in the end, but it most definitely did not. I've never been all that fond of Mona in the first place, but at times I found her likeable. That is, I did in her own storylines - her speech in Blackwood Farm was absolutely intolerable. I couldn't tell whether or not Anne was having trouble thinking up synonyms for "egregious" or if Mona was just one of those annoying sorts of people that uses the same word over again - and when I settled on the latter, she grated even more. But I digress, the point is essentially that Mona and her incessant outbursts, whining, crying, and Lestat-Worship were just bloody irritating. I hate submissiveness, and that's precisely what she was, submissive. To have her grovel to Lestat to forgive her, and him to be so petty as he was!

Patsy's Ghost - No place at all whatsoever in this book. Oncle Julien's haunting as well was a bore. It might have been interesting if developed properly, but he seemed there only to bugger Lestat, and in doing so, he annoyed me as well. And his begging, pleading, and fright at the end of the book was unacceptable.

The characters were completely and utterly undeveloped. Quinn especially, and how disappointing. He could have worked very well as an essential character, but he just sort of shadowed Lestat, and Mona even. In fact, certainly as fledglings we should have examined them and their interaction more carefully instead of transitioning to the Taltos which shouldn't have even been included in this story. And fine and good for Lestat to love Rowan but that bit in the last chapter? Rubbish.

The hunting was horrible contrived, nothing so romantic as Lestat and Louis' cunning, unnoticed killings at parties and the like. A bore, I wanted to be done with it all.

And let me not forget to mention Juan Diego. It might have been an interesting insight into Lestat's psyche if it had a point. But it didn't. It just was there, filling up space, sloppily glued together with the rest of the flimsy "plot."

Overall I would say that it was temporarily entertaining at times, and that definitely wasn't because of the poorly executed plot. This was just a filler, I think, as I wait for better fare, being shipped to me as I write.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Good Intentions, Bad Timing and Worse Delivery
Review: Anne Rice's husband was diagnosed with a brain tumor when this book was being written and obviously, her work suffered because of it. The book is a threadbare cloth compared to the rich tapestry of detail characteristic of most of the Vampire Chronicles and the Mayfair Witches Series. In spite the this and curious and constant use of 'yo' and 'dude', it was a decent read up until the last chapter, but then things went really wrong. Anyone familiar with The Mayfair Witches Series (The Witching Hour, Lasher & Taltos) should skip skipping the last chapter of Blood Canticle because although you get the point, you will never believe it.

However, the most disappointing aspect of the novel is the missed opportunity. Three characters, Michael Curry and Rowan and Mona Mayfair are struggling with the loss of their children. As a mother who tragically lost a child to leukemia, Anne Rice could have really written something truly significant, but did not. Much is said about the toll on the characters, but very little insight is given about their internal conflicts.

Sadly, Anne Rice has said is through with the Vampires and the Mayfair Witches. Hopefully, as time passes, she will change her mind and write an ending worthy of her two best loved series.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: someone is slipping
Review: I have been a fan of Anne Rice for some time. I was really anxious to read her latest creation. And highly disappointed. I haven't a clue what happened to her technique of writing. I mean come on, she has done better then this. I realize she has had a great lost. But this book is an even greater lost. Don't buy it go to the library and save your money!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't Read This Book!
Review: I considered myself a true Anne Rice fan, I even stuck it out through all those dreadfully boring vampire books after the Queen on the Damned, but I will never again read one of her books.
This was truly a terrible book.
If you liked the first three vampire books and The Witching Hour (which was my all time favorite book), stay away from Blood Canticle. Don't even read the description. This book ruined Lestat and the Mayfairs for me.


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