I think I had a dream about raglan james in lestat’s body! he was a total creep and had a foot fetish and was bitey mc biters

^Draw this please. How do you know it was RJ, Lestat is Bitey McBiters, and doesn’t Lestat have a foot fetish already of sorts? at least a sort of anxiety about his own smol feetsies

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soyonscruels:

those who dream only by night: the gothic short stories rec list

have you ever felt like you want to read more fiction in the gothic tradition, but you haven’t the money or the time, or you’re the sort of person who only reads a novel if you’re sure you like the writer? i can help with that! here is a list of short stories, novellas, and one poem, all of which are important in the gothic tradition, the gothic revival, or contemporary gothic fiction, and they are all on the internet! for free! (i enjoy making rec lists, but i particularly enjoy making rec lists where i know that everyone who reads the list can get all of it for free.) so, take a night, make some hot chocolate, and frighten the life out of yourself. you’ll thank me!

  1. manfred by lord byron (1817)
  2. the tell tale heart by edgar allan poe (1843)
  3. carmilla by sheridan le fanu (1872)
  4. lord arthur savile’s crime by oscar wilde (1887)
  5. the yellow wallpaper by charlotte perkins gilman (1892)
  6. lot no. 249 by arthur conan doyle (1892)
  7. the great god pan by arthur machen (1894)
  8. the turn of the screw by henry james (1898)
  9. the monkey’s paw by w.w. jacobs (1902)
  10. sredni vashtar by saki (1911)
  11. casting the runes by m.r. james (1911)
  12. the damned by algernon blackwood (1914)
  13. the tomb by h.p. lovecraft (1922)
  14. the garden party by katherine mansfield (1922)
  15. a rose for emily by william faulkner (1930)
  16. the lottery by shirley jackson (1948)
  17. lamb to the slaughter by roald dahl (1953)
  18. a good man is hard to find by flannery o’connor (1955)
  19. the company of wolves by angela carter (1979)
  20. i, cthulhu by neil gaiman (1986)

Hi most beautiful of the beautiful :* I have kinda sorta read that you ship Louis and Lestat pretty hard (and who doesn’t) so what do you say to Anne Rice seemingly forgetting about Louis once in a while? I mean, he’s been on a pretty low profile in many of the books, unless I missed something?

Why thank u dear, such a lovely compliment! I shall have to post more selfies… unless u are referring to my inner beauty of which I have an abundance *u*

I do ship L/L! Absolutely! However did u guess?? sometimes Louis doesn’t ship them but thats fine bc nobody ships L/L as hard as Lestat ships L/L.

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[fanart by FiestaTB ]

ANYWAY: Why u no write so much Louis, Anne Rice?

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[memeything by vampchronfic]

I don’t remember when exactly, but I think AR did call Louis a “damaged pilgrim” at one point. There’s that.

If you want to cry over Louis, read Merrick, if you haven’t already. He has a lead role in that one ;] But be prepared because your feels will be squarely hit.

Hit the jump for my thoughts on why we don’t get much Louis action post-IWTV.


My theory re: Louis’ low profile is listed below. Because he had served his purpose with his major job (point 1), AR seemed not to need him as much. She kept him around for the same reason Akasha spares him QOTD, because the star of the show, Lestat, loves him.


1. Louis was AR’s vehicle through which to deal with the grief of the death of her daughter. Louis intended to kill Claudia. 

  • Claudia was 5 yrs old, Michele Rice was 5 yrs old. 
  • Claudia and Michele share a birthday (9/22, indicated in her diary entry in QOTD), 
  • btw, Louis shares a birthday with AR (10/4, although I don’t think it’s in canon).

Louis was, in a way, Claudia’s mother: “You became my mother, and my father, and so I’m yours forever.” says movie!Claudia (which, let’s not forget, AR wrote the screenplay).

But more than all that, Louis was the one that AR wanted to interview, “Why did you kill my daughter? Did God, or the Devil, tell you to do so? What did she do wrong? What did we, as parents, do wrong?” Louis basically answered her that Claudia was just in the wrong place at the wrong time; he had no more contact with God or the Devil than AR does, and he was just a hungry animal in the savage garden, and Claudia was just an innocent victim.

2. Louis’ “voice” is rich and structured; IWTV emulated the (I think?) Victorian-era gothic novels (annabellioncourt might know the proper genre) that AR loved. His whole way of being is a quiet intensity, beauty that roils beneath the surface, and that is hard to write. Lestat’s easier, he’s a rollercoaster of egotistical bastard and cowering crybaby. Plus, when Louis is not the POV, you can have pages of other character’s swooning over him ❤

3. AR focused a number of the VC on other characters, and he’s peripheral to their stories. Louis does have some action and has a small section from his POV in PL, though!

That’s one of the details I did like about the QOTD movie; I don’t remember Lestat taking earphones/buds into his coffin in any of the later books, but he did in the film, and I can absolutely see him doing that, and forgetting them often.

Yep, agreed. Since you mentioned movie!QOTD, I was reminded of Time Warner Cable’s eloquent synopsis of it:

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Riiiiight he unites with his counterpart, Akasha. RIGHT. That’s not what I’d call her.

vagabonddaniel:

//I don’t want to be rude or whatever, but fictionkin is not a real thing. You cannot be the soul of a fictional character. An author worked hard to come up with and create these characters–they sprang from their head and their hard work. It’s disrespectful to claim otherwise. 

I really don’t want to see this become a “thing” in this fandom, because we don’t need people claiming and being allowed to claim they are “The Real Lestat” etc. etc. 

This is a thing? I don’t mean to be rude either, just saying, for one’s own sanity, these are fictional characters ‘mkay? 

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straight people reviews:

merciful-death:

gentlemandeathinsilk:

I see.

Platonic friends w/ benefits *wink wink* *nudge nudge* 

Sweeping your platonic friend off his feet when you first meet him:

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Clutching your platonic friend tightly against you as he gives you a hickey with attitude:

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Whispering sweet nothings into your platonic friend’s ear in the cemetery before feeding him your special sauce:

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Adopting a child to keep your platonic friend from leaving you and living together as a family for 60+ yrs? Yeah this is all very platonic.

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Lestat would have cameo fleur-de-lis on EVERYTHING; he’d bypass just the glitter and go for glitter on top of shimmering materials. Also lace and feathers in typical NOLA style. There would be a fountain, everything that couldn’t be in glitter would be in white leather or silver. As I write I this, I slowly realize I’m also describing the ballroom scene in Labyrinth and now, I’m thinking that Lestat would probably eat that up anyway.

[^Followup to an anon’s ask about Lestat as a wedding planner.]

Yep, that sounds about right. Hey sarahandherlabyrinth! We’re talking bout the Labyrinth! 

In case you were wondering

vagabonddaniel:

therealycats:

shroudsinvenice:

hyperbeeb:

uses of the word tentacle/tentacles in Price Lestat- 13

uses of the word preternatural in Prince Lestat- 29

In b4 someone writes tentacle porn

but what about iPhone?!

iPhone appears 22 times. Which is a lot considering no one knows how to use one. 

vagabonddaniel tagged: #prince lestat spoilers #damn someone beat me to it #love that you can search ebooks though #also i got british there for a second #i creatively swear when i’m upset

#damn someone beat me to it, too!