Let the Right One in
Book
Audiences can't get enough of fang fiction. Twilight, True Blood, Being Human, The Vampire Diaries,...
The Vampire Armand (The Vampire Chronicles, #6)
Book
In the latest installment of The Vampire Chronicles, Anne Rice summons up dazzling worlds to bring...
Servant of the Bones
Book
Having created fantastic universes of vampires and witches, the incomparable Anne Rice now carries...
Industrial Magic (Women of the Otherworld, #4)
Book
Think your in-laws are scary? Try meeting Paige Winterbourne’s potential father-in-law: CEO of the...
Rachel King (13 KP) rated The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty (Sleeping Beauty, #1) in Books
Feb 11, 2019
In the first book, Beauty is awakened from her hundred-year sleep with a deflowering by the Prince. He takes her to his kingdom, where she is trained as a sexual slave and plaything, but she fails to be obedient, so is sent to brutal slavery in the neighboring village. In the second book, she is sold at auction and a power struggle ensues as she refuses to be completely broken by her various punishments. Actual plotline wanes in this one until towards the end some of the psychological aspects of sexual slavery are explored before Beauty is kidnapped for a Sultan. In the third book, the various characters all reach closure in varying forms as the sexual aspects of the plot take on a more religious and philosophical tone, as opposed to the crudity of the European castle and village. By the end of the series, it felt more like I was reading a study of a lifestyle for the education and not so much for the indulgence.
The sexual scenes are extremely explicit and graphic with the theme of sado-masochism replete throughout the text, but amazingly, there is still a plotline and decent character development. The first book was my favorite of the three, simply because that is the only book of the three that actually uses the fairy tale in its plotline, and by the third book much of the sex seemed vaguely repetitive and did not affect me as intensely as it did in the beginning. I would even dare to recommend it to those who are of the appropriate age.
I likely have A. N. Roquelaure's influence to thank for my unquestioning devotion to the Kushiel's Legacy series by Jacqueline Carey, now that I think about it...
A Practical Guide to Working in Theatre
Book
Live theatre is an exciting, challenging profession - but how is professional theatre actually made?...
Bloodlaced (Youkai Bloodlines #1)
Book
Kanjin hardly view their servants as human. Even less so when they are different. Asagi is...
Dark Historical Fantasy Paranormal Romance LGBTQIA
The Wolves of Midwinter (The Wolf Gift Chronicles, #2)
Book
Anne Rice is back, with more werewolves, gothic mansions and epic battles between good and evil. It...
Pandora (New Tales of the Vampires, #1)
Book
Anne Rice, creator of the Vampire Lestat, the Mayfair witches and the amazing worlds they inhabit,...
stacey (81 KP) rated Queen of the Damned (2002) in Movies
May 18, 2017
" we are your main desire" --- oh god are you ever, since seeing this movie my fascination with vampires was born. You could say i'm a little obsessed with them.. but in all truth, i'm more than obsessed with them, when all the girls wanted to be something special when they were older i told everyone i wanted to be a vampire, running around with my fake paper teeth, my long cape, screaming when the light hit my skin and running after people to suck their blood. Yeah i was a weird child.
This movie in my opinion is a master piece to anne rice work. If you havent seen it i would suggest that you do
Many people hate this movie, but for me it's a walk down memory lane, every year on my birthday i play this movie and recite it word for word, singing the songs, and dancing to the music. this movie is a big thing for me, it started my love for the violin. When lestat plays with the gypsy. I ran to my mother and told her i wanted a violin. I used to lay in bed and imagine him playing for me.
photo creds to google