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⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ – A Lush, Lyrical Descent into Darkness

Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire is the literary equivalent of a rich, red velvet curtain being pulled back on an eerie stage. Everything feels decadent, shadowy, and just a little bit doomed - and I was absolutely here for it.

Told through the confessional lens of Louis, a reluctant vampire with a poet’s soul, this novel is drenched in emotion. Guilt, longing, despair, rage… every feeling is dialled up to eleven. The structure is brilliant: an actual interview, unfolding in real time, with a human boy as the audience surrogate. It adds this eerie intimacy, like you’ve pulled up a chair too close to a fire that’s burning a little too hot.

Rice’s writing is gorgeous. Gothic and sensual, but never afraid to wallow in moral ambiguity. There are no easy answers here, especially when it comes to Louis and Lestat. Their dynamic is a toxic waltz - manipulation and dependence wrapped in elegance and horror. I kept wanting to throw things at Lestat, then turn around and quote him. He’s that kind of character. Infuriating and fascinating.

That said, this book is a bit of a slow burn. The plot sometimes drifts in dreamlike circles, which can either enchant or frustrate, depending on your mood. And while Claudia’s storyline is gripping and tragic, some of the pacing around it felt uneven to me. I kept waiting for a second wind that took a little too long to arrive.

But even when the story meanders, the atmosphere never lets up. Rice creates a world so vividly haunted, so steeped in its own mythology, that you can practically smell the candle wax and old books. It’s a vampire novel that feels eternal - aching and opulent and deeply weird in the best possible way.

If you're looking for a blood-soaked meditation on immortality, identity, and what it means to be truly alone in the world—this one’s a must. Just maybe light a candle and pour a glass of wine first. You’ll want to set the mood.