Hee! That would have been priceless. Yeah, she's definitely the self-indulgent type. Loves to just go on and on. So I just skimmed the boring/unnecessary parts to track the progress of the family, which I did enjoy.
We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
Jilli, I enjoyed Romeky's first two Vampire books. They seemed to wacky to be taken seriously, but still not pure camp. I loved the melodramatic over-the-topness of the villian. And I loved the hero's mentor.
Of course, I read it years ago, and I still thought Anne Rice was a great writer. I've learned my lesson, but I still remember I, Vampire fondly.
Chiming in with the big agreement about LH's decline. What was fluffy, porny fun with a snarky heroine became "Oh dear Christ, another bestiality threesome with angst and handcuffs? Puh-leeze."
My favorite LH rant is "Americans don't think it's sex unless there's penetration, so the long, involved, groping session that involved multiple orgasms doesn't mean I've had sex with you, therefore I'm still pure."
LH needs to hang out in Bitches.
So is Anita still Catholic? That bit of her character was pretty tenuous last time I checked in.
I'm ok with almost all of that...except that Anita needs to be the only fuckable chick in town...I'm still gonna get some more at the library, one day.
Grrr... off to book club in a few minutes, but haven't even seen or touched the book- not for lack of trying either (tho' possibly for lack of money, since a new copy is 25 bucks and I'm broke). The first time I've ever not even read the book, and I heard it's good. Luckily the actual *book* part of book club takes 20 minutes, the rest is chit-chat and food. Maybe I'll talk about a book I have read since last book club, I just have to decide which one...
I actually like The Vampire Lestat and Queen of the Dammed better than Interview.
Me, too. A lot. And although I've read the subsequent vampire books she wrote, I still believe that the vampire "series" ended with Queen of the Damned. Because the rest were so. fucking. execrable. (Merrick wasn't bad, but still meh.)
I *adore* The Witching Hour, and can even tolerate Lasher. Taltos was a joke, and what Rice did to the Mayfair family in Blackwood Farm and Blood Canticle makes me want to beat her to death with a grammar book.
Wow, I completely forgot about Blackwood Farm and Blood Canticle. I think I only vaguely knew they were Mayfair books. It never even occurs to me to riffle through the first pages of her books anymore.
There's nothing sadder (well, there are, obviously, many things...) than losing interest in a series or author. I adored both of Anne Perry's series of historical mysteries until a year or so ago, and Slaves of Obsession made no sense no matter how many times I reread the ending. In both series, too, she seemed to forego actual story and character for moralizing, sermonizing, and the more boring details of the end of the Victorian Age.
I think I only vaguely knew they were Mayfair books. It never even occurs to me to riffle through the first pages of her books anymore.
They dovetail the Mayfairs and the Lestat vampire clan (or, actually, just him) with some new characters; the new characters were actually interesting, and a book about only them, given to a good editor, would be pretty good, I think.
But what Rice did to my beloved Mona Mayfair in those 2 books.... Ptui! Let us never speak of it again!