The Vampire Armand

The Vampire Armand

By Anne Rice

Subjects: Vampires in fiction, Renaissance in fiction, Literature, Vampires, fiction, Large type books, Italy, fiction, Vampires, Renaissance, New York Times reviewed, Fiction, European fiction, Vampiros, Renacimiento, Kievan Rus in fiction, Lestat (fictitious character), fiction, Ficción, Fiction, horror

Description: The previous volume of the Vampire Chronicles, Memnoch the Devil, was called 'a modern Paradise Lost' by the Washington Post. Taking the Vampire Lestat from fiction into legend, it left him lying in a New Orleans convent, at the edge of death. Magnificent and electrifying, this new volume in the Vampire Chronicles returns to the glittering story of Armand, mesmerizing leader of the vampire coven at the eighteenth-century Theatre des Vampires in Paris (seductively played by Antonio Banderas in the film of Interview with the Vampire). Snatched from the steppes of Russia as a child, and sold as a slave in Renaissance Venice, Armand's story sweeps through several hundred years, to New Orleans at the end of the twentieth century, where Lestat lies waiting for immortality, and the legend continues to grow....

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