Updated 04:40 pm.EST, Sat November 21, 2009

Entertainment|Fri, Oct. 31 2008 10:27 AM EDT

From Vampires to Jesus

By Associated Press Writer|Cain Burdeau

NEW ORLEANS – It's Halloween, and Anne Rice has a new book — a memoir in fact — that's climbing best-seller lists. Everything is normal, then.

  • rice
    (Photo: AnnRice.com / Becket M. Ghioto)
    Ann Rice edits a book in her "Desert Library" in this undated file photo.

Normal if it were 1994 — the height of Rice's megaselling fame as a queen of Southern Gothic pulp.

For those who haven't been paying attention lately to vampire lit, America's most famous chronicler of bloodsuckers doesn't live in New Orleans anymore — and hasn't since before Hurricane Katrina hit — and she's riding new waves of enthusiasm: the memoir and Christian lit.

Her memoir, "Called Out of Darkness: A Spiritual Confession," is the latest piece of evidence that Rice is reinventing herself in an attempt to build a reputation as a serious Christian writer.

In the memoir, the 67-year-old writer doesn't disavow the two decades she spent churning out books on vampires, demons and witches — with a batch of S&M erotica thrown in — following the breakout success of her first novel in 1976, "Interview With the Vampire."

But she's clearly moved on.

In a telephone interview from her mountain home in Rancho Mirage, Calif., Rice laid out her goal:

"To be able to take the tools, the apprenticeship, whatever I learned from being a vampire writer, or whatever I was — to be able to take those tools now and put them in the service of God is a wonderful, wonderful, wonderful opportunity," she said. "And I hope I can redeem myself in that way. I hope that the Lord will accept the books I am writing now."

The memoir follows the release of two books in a planned four-part, first-person chronicle of the life of Jesus.

And in this new 245-page memoir, Rice presents her former life as vampire writer as that of a soul-searching wanderer in the deserts of atheism; as someone akin to her most famous literary creations — Lestat, her "dark search engine," Louis the aristocrat-turned-vampire and Egyptian Queen Akasha, "the mother of all vampires."

"I do think that those dark books were always talking about religion in their own way. They were talking about the grief for a lost faith," she said.

In 2002, Rice broke away completely from atheism — nearly four decades after she gave up her Roman Catholic faith as the 1960s started. It happened when she went off to college and found her peers talking about existentialism — Martin Heidegger, Albert Camus, Jean-Paul Sartre. Religion, she writes, was too restrictive to the young Rice. Too out of step.

Yet, religion had to come back into her life, she writes. For her, it was something she'd have to face up to again like an absent parent or a long-lost love child or Banquo the ghost in Macbeth.

By the late 1990s, when she went back to Mass, Rice — the author whose books sold in the tens of millions and who had recharged Hollywood's appetite for vampire-inspired horror — had fallen on hard times.

Her husband, poet and artist Stan Rice, died of a brain tumor in 2002. And she had become victim to diabetes.

Always over-the-top and beyond the rational, she writes that her return of faith was preceded by a series of epiphanies — many while on travels to Europe's cathedrals, Israel and Brazil. In one episode, when she visited the giant Jesus statue above Rio de Janeiro, she writes that she felt "delirium" as the clouds broke and revealed the statue.

Her professed revelations recall the religious intoxication she describes of her childhood. Continue »

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  • Sat Nov 01, 2008 11:39 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    Yes Believer, she did. You could go to the Focus on the Family website and listen to the mp3s. It was really good if you are interested in writing. She said that she will not be writing anymore vampire books and went to a great length to talk about how her estrangement from God was expressed in the whole vampire genre. The vampire thing had to do with someone who had lost real life and was desperate to get it back. Hence, the vampire who every night must go out and find someone to bite. The vampire can never get back to real life. She described how much of a chore it was to be an atheist and look at sunsets to say that it all happened by accident and how great a relief it was to return to Christ. I thought it was fascinating. She really sounds, well humble, although I hate to use the word. In the back of the first book, Out of Egypt, she recounts how she read JAT Robertson, and D A Carson in her research and liked them both.

  • Sat Nov 01, 2008 10:46 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    runningdoc, thanks for that info and did she say anything with regards to her former writings?

  • Sat Nov 01, 2008 10:13 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I listened to her talk on Focus on the Family and found her extremely interesting. Her description of her relationship to Christ sounded real. I read her first "Christian" novel "Out of Egypt" and liked it. She does take some literary license with the story but made a really big point about doing her best not to say more than she should. She was trying to tell us what she thought it would be like to be a child growing up learning about the world that you created. She assumes that the child Christ emptied himself as Paul speaks of in Phil 2 of the independant use of His power as God.
    Her view is Catholic. She reads her Bible several hours a day. I wish I could say the same.
    Strikes me as a young believer who would be subject to young believers view of scripture. Requires us to be patient and merciful. James 2:12-13

  • Sat Nov 01, 2008 12:45 am Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    "From Vampires to Jesus" but apparently not "to the Bible"

    If one evidence of salvation is a love for God's Word, she's showing an awful propensity for taking liberty with God's history without permission.

  • Fri Oct 31, 2008 10:21 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    Having read this article alone I'm having a hard time discovering when or if she ever came to acknowledge Christ alone as her Savior and Lord, has she had a real genuine conversion experience or is she simply another George Harrison who wrote and sang songs that talked about Christ but never appears to have had a genuine conversion experience. Personally I don't believe she has because if she had she would be renouncing many of her earlier writings.

  • Fri Oct 31, 2008 4:53 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Just praise God that someone has returned to Him, as liken to the prodigal son (daughter). One more name in the Lamb's Book of Life.....I would be glad if my parents and siblings were making the same decision.

  • Fri Oct 31, 2008 2:15 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Stop-the-Madness,
    >> performing miracles at age 8 <<

    I haven't read any of the Gnostic Gospels, but is that from the Gospel of Mary?

  • Fri Oct 31, 2008 1:25 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    Good for her.

  • Fri Oct 31, 2008 1:19 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 1

    It IS gratifying to know that Ms. Rice hasn't let her newfound religion diminish her support for the Lesbian & Gay community, including her son, Christopher.

  • Fri Oct 31, 2008 1:16 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 2

    "Anne Rice presents a different Jesus than the Jesus of the Bible. Her "Jesus" was performing miracles at age 8 but the REAL Jesus performed his first miracle at a wedding in Cana in Galilee when he was around 30 years old.

    Beware."

    Just because it is the first recorded miracle in the Bible does not mean that is was his first miracle. Don't read something that is not there. Rice's works are fiction and we can expect that she will be writing about events that only happened within her imagination. However, God has used other fictional works to challenge people to investigate the truth of Christianity. I suspect He can do the same with her works as well.

  • Fri Oct 31, 2008 1:10 pm Agree: 1   Disagree: 0

    In the picture she really reminds me of the lady who makes the outfits in the "Incredibles" movie.

  • Fri Oct 31, 2008 12:49 pm Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I say let's give God the glory for saving her from where she once was to now being in a relationship with Jesus again.

  • Fri Oct 31, 2008 11:32 am Agree: 0   Disagree: 0

    I can't lie..."Interview with a Vampire" is one of my favorite movies! Claudia is one of my favorite characters of all time!

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