Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Anne Rice

Quote by Anne Rice

Work

The Complete Vampire Chronicles 12-Book Bundle

This bundle gathers the core works of Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles, a sequence of novels that began in 1976 and expanded over several decades to become one of the most influential vampire fiction series in English literature. The series centers on vampire characters who grapple with questions of morality, identity, mortality, and meaning across centuries of existence. The narratives span multiple time periods and geographic locations, from eighteenth-century France and New Orleans to ancient Egypt and beyond. The books are known for their lush descriptive prose, homoerotic undertones, religious and philosophical speculation, and the transformation of vampires from monstrous predators into complex, self-aware beings who suffer from their condition. The series introduced readers to iconic characters whose stories interweave throughout the volumes, creating an elaborate mythology around vampire origins and society. Rice's approach to the vampire as a figure of existential angst and spiritual searching distinguished the series from earlier horror traditions and influenced subsequent vampire literature, film, and television across popular culture. more

Author

Anne Rice
Anne Rice

Anne Rice is an American author known for her gothic and fantasy novels, born on October 4, 1941. Her most famous work, 'The Vampire Chronicles', has gained her a wide readership and influenced vampire culture. more

You May Also Like

“Forget what you might have heard. There are no separate corps of angels for agnostics, atheists, Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Muslims, Mormons, Buddhists, Unitarians, Hindus, Druids, Shintoists, Wiccans, and so on. To put a spin on the old saying, it's okay if you don't believe in angels. We believe in you.”

“Sometimes I think there's a beast that lives inside me, in the cavern that's where my heart should be, and every now and then it fills every last inch of my skin, so that I can't help but do something inappropriate. Its breath is full of lies; it smells of spite.”

“See?" Fezzik pointed then. Far down, at the very bottom of the mountain path, the man in black could be seen running. "Inigo is beaten." Inconceivable!" exploded the Sicilian. Fezzik never dared disagree with the hunchback. "I'm so stupid," Fezzik nodded. "Inigo has not lost to the man in black, he has defeated him. And to prove it he has put on all the man in black's clothes and masks and hoods and boots and gained eighty pounds.”