Iconic Gothic Literature Author, Best Known For Interview With A Vampire, Anne Rice Passes Away 80! RIP

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Iconic Gothic Literature Author, Best Known For Interview With A Vampire, Anne Rice Passes Away 80! RIP.

EW reports.

Anne Rice, Interview with a Vampire author, dies at 80

The world-renowned author changed the game for gothic literature.

Anne Rice, whose vampire fiction and other stories of the sexy supernatural have enchanted readers ever since her 1976 debut novel Interview with the Vampire, has passed away at her New Orleans home due to complications resulting from a stroke. She was 80.

Rice’s son Chrisopther confirmed her death on Facebook and shared his words in a tweet, writing, “Earlier tonight, my mother, Anne Rice, passed away due to complications resulting from a stroke. She left us almost nineteen years to the day my father, her husband Stan, died.”

Rice’s publisher, Penguin Random House, also confirmed her death to EW.

Born and raised in New Orleans, Rice set many of her most celebrated novels in her hometown, including Interview and the Lives of the Mayfair Witches series. Though she grew up Catholic, she abandoned organized religion while studying at San Francisco State University in the ’60s. She married poet Stan Rice in 1961, and the couple had two children; their son Christopher is also a novelist, and their daughter, Michele, died at age 5 from leukemia.

Interview with the Vampire “poured out” of her after the death of her daughter, Rice told EW in 2005. In the decades following its success, she published dozens more enormously popular novels — some under the pseudonyms Anne Rampling and A. N. Roquelaure — including the erotic Sleeping Beauty books and the Vampire Chronicles, the latter series of which begins with Interview and follows the vampire Lestat de Lioncourt (played by Tom Cruise in Neil Jordan’s 1994 film adaptation of Interview with the Vampire, for which Rice wrote the screenplay herself).

Rice returned to the Catholic Church in the late ’90s, at which time she moved away from vampire fiction and started exploring religious topics with her Christ the Lord series, her Songs of the Seraphim series, and a memoir of her spiritual transformation, Called Out of Darkness. In 2010, however, she posted to her Facebook page, where she was very active, that though she remained “committed to Christ as always,” she was leaving the Church once again because “my conscience will allow nothing else.”

Rice’s split from the Church marked her return to gothic literature: 2012 brought the first book of the Wolf Gift Chronicles, which focuses on werewolves, and in 2014, she revisited the bloodsucking antihero that made her famous with Prince Lestat.

In a 2009 interview, EW asked Rice what made her vision of vampires unique. “Their glamour,” she said. “I thought to myself, ‘Why should this supernatural being be repulsive? Why should he be feral like Dracula? What if he was more like a dark angel?'” Now, 45 years since her Lestat first entered our cultural consciousness, “no one would even question vampires being beautiful and magnetic.”

In his tribute post, Rice revealed that a celebration for his mother’s life will take place next year in New Orleans, confirming that “the event will be open to the public and will invite the participation of her friends, readers, readers and fans who brought her such joy and inspiration throughout her life.”

Rice has left an indelible mark on gothic fiction, the entire vampire mythology, and our collective romantic vision of the American South. She will be greatly missed, but her legacy will live on for as long as her undead heroes do. The literary world has lost one of its immortals.

On behalf of the IP team, I offer our condolences to the family, friends and fellow fans of Ann Rice.

John is a long-time pop culture fan, comics historian, and blogger. He is currently the Editor-in-Chief at Comics Nexus. Prior to being EIC he has produced several column series including DEMYTHIFY, NEAR MINT MEMORIES and the ONE FAN'S TRIALS at the Nexus plus a stint at Bleeding Cool producing the COMICS REALISM column. As BabosScribe, John is active on his twitter account, his facebook page, his instagram feed and welcomes any and all feedback. Bring it on!