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Blood Canticle (The Vampire Chronicles)

Blood Canticle (The Vampire Chronicles)

List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $17.13
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: In Agreement With the Rest of the Disappointed...
Review: I have usually disagreed with poor reviews of Rice's books. I have always enjoyed the stories, I do not expect every one of them to be as memorable as the first ones. But Blood Canticle is truly an exception. Yes, it was nice to see the next part of the story unfold, nice to see Rowan, Lestat, and others. But the language in this book is almost hard to accept as that of Rice, much less the words of Lestat. It sounds nothing like that of her previous novels. While Lestat does mention his trying to use more modern language, we would expect him to at least sound like the thoughtful cynic that he is, and he sounds like a compltetely different character in this book. Most Lestat fans love him for the way his words flow out so beautifully. So, yes, the book may be a necessary read in order to keep up with your beloved characters, but don't expect to enjoy this as much as some of her earlier novels.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Thank you Anne Rice
Review: Dear Ann
I read the reviews of you latest book and can't wait to read it. I love the character Lestat. My nephew Michael stole your works from me, because he doesn't think I should be following such things being a Christian. God only knows what he did with them, may he be judge. Again thank you for your very talented work. All the best to you. Peace and Love

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Why it ended as it ended.
Review: Allow me, please, to set aside for the moment all the controversy this book as engendered, and point out something I think y'all might have missed.

For years now, Rice has been flirting with the idea of her vampires meeting up with modern science. If you've read the books, you know this. Now, with "BC", she's finally run Lestat up against someone with the education and background to make that a reality: her character Rowan Mayfair, M.D., founder of Mayfair Medical, an institution, we are led to believe, to rival the Mayo Clinic. I read with avid interest to see how she'd finally deal with the question. Answer: she doesn't. How does she manage to avoid it? Because Rowan's (SPOILER!) in luuuve with Lestat! She's in luuuve, and therefore her brains, her experience, her training, her medical genius, her bloody Hipocratic oath, all fly out the window. She's in luuuve, and so this medical prodigy becomes a big, blubbering crybaby.

Well, that's insulting. It's insulting to any woman with any intelligence whatsoever, particularly those working in the (still) male-dominated medical field. And it's insulting to her readers who can spot a dodge when they see one.

But by that as it may. *I* found it funny.

Here's what I think. Rice ended the series as she did, because otherwise, how long could it be before Rowan wakes up, dries up, remembers her Hipocratic oath and all her training and decides to jam a hypodermic into her date? Runs a chromatographic scan on that vampiric blood and finds...what? Anne? Anne? Anne?

The series ended because AR, after all these years, still has NO IDEA what such a scan might reveal. Figuring out what it might reveal would mean asking for help, and, as her statements regarding editors show, Ms. Rice has a problem with that. It would mean surrendering to the world of reality, to science, to the rejection of Arguments of Authority and to the tyranny of numbers. Anne doesn't like numbers. She's said so.

Ah, well, as Barbie (TM) once whined, "Math is hard!"

So farewell, Anne Rice. Good luck with that next, non-vampiric novel. Waiting to see the sales on that one.

(Of course, there's always this possibility: That Lestat already KNOWS what such a scan would reveal, and THAT is why, despite his great love for Rowan Mayfair, M.D., he's holding back. He knows, and the news ain't good, for him or for any vampire. Just a thought.)
[...]

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Love Anne Rice but was a bit dissapointed with this one!
Review: I was looking forward to reading this book immensely. It had all my favorite characters, Lestat, Quin and the Mayfair family. However I have to say it was a bit of a disappointment. It dragged a bit at places. After building Quin up to be such an interesting character in Blackwood Farm, he turned into a bumbling frightened vampire. Also the character Mona was a big disappointment to me. I loved her character in the Mayfair books and indeed in Blackwood Farm but as a vampire she was a very weak character.
I gave the book 4 stars because its still an Anne Rice book. I think she is a brilliant author and I will read any more books that she publishes. In fact I will reread this book again.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Yo, dude, see ya ( farewell Lestat)
Review: I understand that over time we all use slang, but the amount in this book felt very forced. Like Lestat was trying to remind us how cool he is (or at least was). And I can even understand that he wants to be good, but saintly? From previous books the only reason Lestat would want to be saintly is to be worshipped. His reasons why seem more political than religious. At least we know he watches CNN. His saintly obsession just goes overboard.

I was very disappointed that the book did not center on a more vampirical story. In Merrick, Lestat left with Louis, David and Merrick. In Blood Canticle, not a mention of why he parted their company just that he had been alone for months. It has been a long time since we have seen many of the vampires together. I was hoping that Maharet would come to see Lestat. The constant fighting and making up reminding me over a bad romance movie. Lestat was indeed bespelled by Blackwood Farm because his sauve nature sure melts away. Hasn't he used a computer before? Lestat and Rowan falling in love, I'm thinkging no. It felt like I was supposed to be feeling more depth between them, like an unspoken bond, but I just couldn't.
Peace Keeper Quinn, the pretty backdrop. And with Mona is with like Rice was trying to combined Claudia and a young Lestat, but she apologized so quickly I just started to become annoyed.

Yes, this is my 'stupid' opinion. I, who became obsessed with the VC after I saw IWTV (which was the first rated

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Never a disappointment
Review: I read this book a few days after it was released. I've reread it three times since then as I do all of Anne Rice's books. I have read every single book that she has written, right down to the Beauty series, and I have to say that she has never been a disappointment.

Lestat's evolution into a saint and then inevitable plunge into the old Lestat was to be expected but that doesn't mean it was written poorly. Lestat is Lestat and as an aspiring writer I understand how sometimes books just write themselves. Just because you want Lestat to stay the same throughout the years it doesn't mean that he wants to. These characters are entities unto themselves and just like any character or person, for that matter, they evolve and grow over time. They don't always make the choices you want them to or become the people you think they should be but as Anne so eloquently put it, if you don't like it, read something else.

Well I loved it, Anne. I look forward to what else you have to give to the world whether it is simple reviews on Amazon or a whole new genre of books. Thank you for the years you have given us thus far and the gift of your imagination.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: delighted ...
Review: I'm an extremely faithful reader of Anne Rice for years, and sometimes it is hard to be objective on someone's work when you love her as much as I do, but I'll try to be objective.
And I apologize for any mistakes of english, I'm french, so it's a litte difficult for me to write in english.
This said, I felt like a duty to post a review on this site, after writing an e-mail to her, a few months ago, to tell her my entire support. Not only because I'm one of her faithful reader, but because I felt some comments were an complete lack of respect to her, as a person, and mostly as an author.
As a beggining author myself (I insist on the word "beginning", as I'm currantly writing my first novel), I imagined how painful it has been for her to read such venimous comments about her novel. I couldn't imagine that the responses had been so cruel for her and her work until I read all the comments posted here. And most of the time, truly, for the worst reviews, there are no really arguments, there are not really ideas to defend this point of view. So, it often lacks credibility.
Writing a novel represents an HUGE ammount of work, researches and studies. I can't help but being in admiration when I realise how much she works for every single novel she writes. Before beginning to write, I had not the slightest idea of how hard it truly is to write a novel. Writing on your own changes everything in your life, and it changes the way you perceive the work of an other author. It changes everything. You have far more respect for an author, now that you understand how difficult it is. You realise how much an author is involved in his work, how much his writing represents in his life.
There had been diffamous comments here. Doubting that she had written this book ... I hope the persons who wrote that realise how painful it can be to an author to read such a thing. When you begin to write, you realise the power of words, how it affects people, how it can make them laugh, or cry, or think.
So, even if you didn't like this novel, respect is an essential thing. And I sincerely think that a lot of comments were purely disrespectful, for both her and her work, which deserves at least respect.
As to the book in itself, I was, as always, delighted with every page. I cherish every line, every single word she has ever written. She is the author who gave me the desire to write my own stories, and this is while reading her novels that I realised that the rest of my life would be dedicated to writing.
Reading her has changed my life. I used to see the world in black and white before reading her, now I see it in colors.
I've got the most sincere admiration for her and her work, and if someday I got such a beautiful career as hers, I'd be the happiest person in the world.
She has offered me, through her writing, to see the world, humans, religion, with such an fresh way ... I've grown up reading her, and her novels have been the most passionate pages I've ever read of my life.
If I could, I'd put a dozens stars for this book, five is not enough.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Haven't read it but I will now!
Review: Yow know a book is really good when it creates this much controversy. Give Ms. Rice a break! I doubt many of you could do better. Writing is difficult and it has its cycles.


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