Please click on my ads! They'll give me money!


CrispAds Blog Ads

Sunday, October 23, 2005

Writing for the Lord



Famous vampire novel author Anne Rice to publish Christian novel (H/T: Drudge):
"For the last six months," she says, "people have been sending e-mails saying, 'What are you doing next?' And I've told them, 'You may not want what I'm doing next'." We'll know soon. In two weeks, Anne Rice, the chronicler of vampires, witches and—under the pseudonym A. N. Roquelaure—of soft-core S&M encounters, will publish "Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt," a novel about the 7-year-old Jesus, narrated by Christ himself. "I promised," she says, "that from now on I would write only for the Lord." It's the most startling public turnaround since Bob Dylan's "Slow Train Coming" announced that he'd been born again.

... Rice knows "Out of Egypt" and its projected sequels—three, she thinks—could alienate her following; as she writes in the afterword, "I was ready to do violence to my career." But she sees a continuity with her old books, whose compulsive, conscience-stricken evildoers reflect her long spiritual unease. "I mean, I was in despair." In that afterword she calls Christ "the ultimate supernatural hero ... the ultimate immortal of them all."
And so, I expect, a fine writer steps up to the first rank and joins Tolkien and Chesterton among the very greatest of Catholic novelists. It should be worth checking out.

6 comments:

anneobrienrice@mac.com said...

Thank you, my friend. I want to live up to your trust. There's so much misinformation about this book, it's becoming disinformation. My life has led to this and it's from my heart. Two thousands years of Christian art inspire me to work up my nerve and do the thing we must all do: tell the story of the Incarnation to others, over and over again. Tell it in a new way. Tell it for the one who hasn't heard. Tell it for the one who may tell it to some one else tomorrow and the next day and the day after that. Writing Christ the Lord was the greatest challenge I've ever faced. And now as I set out on the book tour, this first stop being in Nashville, I know i face tough questions from the press. But it's all worth it. I've never been so committed or so convinced. Take care, Anne Rice.

Paul, just this guy, you know? said...

Mrs. Rice, I am thrilled and honored that you visited my blog. I recognized immediately that your new novel is part of what I see as a renaissance of modern artists, novelists, moviemakers, etc., expressing the eternal truths of the Christian revelation in their own ways. My wife is a fan of your work, and we've already pre-ordered your new book from Amazon.

I always wanted to grow up to be an author, but there must be thousands like me for every one like you. So I'm just a blogger. I thank you for being a writer; I've enjoyed several of your books, but wife a seriously a fan of yours.

We look forward to reading your newest.

- Paul

Paul, just this guy, you know? said...

If you got to this site by clicking on Blogad's "Christ the Lord" ad, welcome!

I've just finished reading the novel myself, and I'll be posting a full review soon. I hope you'll come back to read it. Short version: It's outstanding!

I don't get paid for any of this (I didn't even know about Blogads link until my blog traffic increased sharply), and I'm not a pro writer and I'm nobody special, this site is just about what I think. Read this for a better idea of what I'm about.

Thanks for coming by!

Paul, just this guy, you know? said...

Read my review of CHRIST THE LORD, by Anne Rice.

Anonymous said...

Anne, turgid and giddy once again, working hard to be something she can never be, but, having herself a good time with it. Her work has always suffered from this flaw, the need to see things the way she'd like them to be. Here again she steps in the doo doo. If you think she is a "great" writer you are not doing much actual reading, are you? the sleeping beauty stuff was pretty funny and she still believes gay people should be able to marry. just ask her.

Paul, just this guy, you know? said...

You are of course free to disagree with me about her as a writer, as well as about the quality of this novel. I liked Christ The Lord.

As to gay "marriage", I am free to disagree with her about that; this novel doesn't address that topic, although my blog does. It seems to me that someone who's come so far may yet come farther.

Besides, I think more writers should see things as they'd like them to be, rather than as they fear.

And I do plenty of reading.