bironic: Neil Perry gazing out a window at night (RSL neil window)
[personal profile] bironic
I got under the covers last night and finished the last 150 pages of Prince Lestat, and all in all, I'm glad to have read the book.

Trying not to spoil anything specific:

Silly as it may be to say, I'm glad Lestat finally grew up a bit and settled into himself. I'm glad Louis, too, found some closure. I'm glad Daniel wasn't out of his mind anymore. It always disappointed me that becoming a vampire in this world meant losing the love you felt as a human for the important people in your life, whether they were human or vampire, and that most vampires were loners, so to see both of those standards start to break down in this book was a comfort. There were charming moments, mostly involving Marius. (♥) And a little of the old magic, a little thrill when favorite characters convene in one place and interact, a little Mary Sue daydream in Rose, who sort of recapitulated Jesse's story, but it worked the first time, and sure enough it worked again.

(Honestly: Sexy scene where Lestat asks Marius to turn two beloved humans into vampires, and they're going over what kind of ceremony it should entail and in what room and at what time it should happen, who can watch and who can come in later to share their own blood, and Marius asks if Pandora can come along so they can trade off over and over, and the whole thing is just a stone's throw from being ritualistic sexual initiation, mm.)

& I'm glad the Voice turned out to be something consistent within the vampire/ghost/witch/spirit mythos and not something generally metaphysical or specifically Christian. Even though the whole resolution involved the latter. (The Voice appeared in a vision with a face like Jesus, suffering, and then Lestat sort of became Jesus. Again.) In a way, it was like seeing Anne Rice find peace, reflected in her favorite character and in the story, so that even though I personally don't share her beliefs nor am I interested in that sort of narrative mixing with my vampires, it felt comforting.

All of the above made it worthwhile. But it wasn't consistently enjoyable. Parts dragged. Different characters had to find out the same things from chapter to chapter before they gathered to discuss as a group. Several characters blended together and/or were not compelling. It seemed like she was setting up some twists, but they went nowhere. Wasted potential with Seth and Fareed, vampire physician-scientists. Huge medical ethics breach that no one seemed bothered by. Armand appeared in a lot of scenes but said and did basically nothing. The writing got sloppy or purple sometimes. Eye rolling at constant use of terminology like "Cloud Gift" and "Fire Gift."

And I'm not thrilled that—SPOILER?—the solution to the vampire population's problems was electing super special snowflake Lestat as a monarch who will reign from his own fancy court. He may have matured since the first few books, but he's going to chafe at being at everyone's beck and call. Well, either that, or he'll love it and then Gabrielle and Marius and whoever will have to smack him back down to size. Speaking of which, heh, I found it hard to believe Gabrielle didn't speak up when the council-of-sorts decided that no one should go off the grid anymore. It's also hard to believe this kumbaya united vampire tribe stuff will hold together very long.

Final opinion: If the series stopped here, it would be a decent conclusion. Unlike half the stuff she put in Blood and Gold and whatnot, it felt like this story really happened (in the Vampire Chronicles world). I'll almost certainly buy a copy when it comes out in paperback. And then skip many sections on re-read. :)

ETA for reference: Guardian review on the digital age angle; Nerdist; WaPo; PissedOffGeek on the science vs. faith theme

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And now, the cooking done, it's back to vidding. Two vids in progress as of yesterday, two different sources, two different tones and styles. Helps to switch between them when feeling stuck or bored on one.

...Okay, after this. Aisha Tyler is on PBS watching someone cook octopus.

Date: Nov. 16th, 2014 11:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kassrachel.livejournal.com
This post is so interesting to read. I loved the early Vampire Chronicles books -- imprinted on them liek woah as an adolescent -- but at a certain point I came to find Anne Rice herself so frustrating, and the universe so rambly, that I stopped reading. I'm glad there was some good stuff here.

Date: Nov. 16th, 2014 11:11 pm (UTC)
ext_2047: (RSL neil window)
From: [identity profile] bironic.livejournal.com
Same here. Loved the first few so much, tolerated the middle ones with diminishing feelings and patience, don't think I even read the last two.

IMO, The Nerdist review got it just right. To excerpt:

Ask most fans of Anne Rice’s Vampire Chronicles series which is their favorite entry in the saga, and I’d say nine out of ten times they’ll tell you it’s one of the first three books: Interview with the Vampire (1976), The Vampire Lestat (1985), or The Queen of the Damned (1988). The novels that followed in the series each have their merits, specifically The Tale of the Body Thief and The Vampire Armand, but by and large it’s the first three books that fans tend to hold dear to their hearts. Perhaps The Queen of the Damned is the one they love most of all, for the way it weaves so many different aspects of the lore together, introduces new characters and reintroduces older ones, moves back and forth through history, and pits the entire vampire community against an ancient menace in a life or death struggle for the future of both the human and vampire species. [...]

Rice’s new book, Prince Lestat, although technically the 13th book in the series, is very much a sequel to Queen of the Damned, both literally in terms of its plot, and in the way it’s structured. Many fans of the older Vampire Chronicles [...] will be very happy to have a new volume in the series that sticks so closely to the things that made us fall in love with this world in the first place.

[...] Although Prince Lestat doesn’t outright contradict the events of [all the books published from Memnoch the Devil through Blood Canticle], it’s telling that none of the witch/vampire hybrid characters appear or are even mentioned in this new book, even those made vampires by Lestat himself, the title character.

[...] I think what fans have wanted for years is for all the characters to come together again, and for an event to propel the mythology forward instead of just looking back on everyone’s origin stories, and I can say that Prince Lestat certainly does just that.

Date: Nov. 17th, 2014 06:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cincodemaygirl.livejournal.com
Interesting, thank you for the write up! I think I'd have to reread way too many books for this one to make sense to me, so I'm going to skip it--but it was great to get a little taste of it here. <3

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