INTRODUCTION
On Saturday evening, October 14, 1961, I drove with the parents of my friend Stan Rice from Dallas, Texas, to the nearby college town of Denton to attend Stan’s wedding to Anne O’Brien. I had never met Anne, who had been living in San Francisco, but I had heard Stan talk about her a great deal. I no longer remember just what impressions of Anne I’d formed in advance, but I do remember the moment we met. I remember being struck by how pretty she was and by her slightly shy and endearing smile. I liked her at once, but even so I couldn’t have supposed that moment marked the beginning of one of the most rewarding friendships of my life.
Within a few months Stan and Anne had moved to San Francisco, where they were going to school and working, and a few months after that I moved to southern California to attend graduate school. Airfares were much cheaper in those days (only twenty-four dollars round-trip between Los Angeles and San Francisco!), so not long after my arrival I visited them in their apartment on Ashbury only a few yards from the intersection with Haight, which was to become so familiar a landmark just a few years later. Soon I was visiting regularly, and it was as if Anne and I had known each other for years. No matter what the interval between them, our conversations seemed continuous—always lively talks filled with the enthusiasm, the passionate commitments, the humor and intensity, the urgent engagement with life that define Anne to anyone who knows her.
We had been friends having such conversations for almost fifteen years when Anne’s first novel, Interview with the Vampire, was published, and her life and Stan’s were changed forever. In the years since then I’ve watched as she has become not simply a successful novelist but one of the most widely read and admired writers in contemporary American literature. I have many times seen Anne interviewed on television, profiled in magazines and newspapers, greeted by throngs at book signings. I’ve listened to people who have read her books talk about her with the kind of immediacy and familiarity typically reserved for those we know best. In an important sense, I have often thought, they do know Anne well, for her novels are deeply informed by her character and personality. To read them is indeed to have a kind of “conversation” with Anne. But of course there are other kinds of conversations too, and I’ve seen and heard for myself how many people there are who would like to talk to her.
I should confess that I’ve found it a curious experience seeing someone I’ve known so well for so long being embraced by crowds who claim a quite different but certainly potent intimacy. And so perhaps inevitably I have reflected on the relationship between my Anne and the public’s. Gradually I’ve concluded that while the fascination with her is rooted in her work, it also goes beyond that to something in Anne herself, something that is both compellingly attractive and slightly mysterious, and it was with such thoughts in mind that I first spoke to her about taping the series of conversations on which this book is based. I knew quite simply how much fun she is to talk to, how interesting and thoughtful, how candid, how honest and even brave, and I knew that I had rarely if ever seen an interview or profile that I thought did justice to her. Too often the interviewer got in the way. Too often Anne’s own voice had to contend with the journalist’s impressions of her. Let her speak for herself, I thought. She’s wonderfully good at it. And so on four occasions—three spread over a week in late August 1993 and a fourth in early January 1995—we sat in a sun-filled room looking out on the garden of her beautiful Greek Revival house in New Orleans’s Garden District and talked as we had so many times before.
If these occasions were necessarily more self-conscious than our usual encounters, I nevertheless wanted to capture as much as possible the tone and texture that have characterized our conversations during these almost thirty-five years. I did make some notes to remind myself of things I wanted to bring up, but I hardly needed them. With an opening question or comment, we were off, and the conversation quickly acquired a life of its own. There was no critical or biographical agenda. Rather, I simply cast the net wide and let Anne’s energy and presence, her intelligence, her forthrightness and humor have full sway. Indeed, I might say a word about Anne’s humor. Although some people expect her to be quite exotic, if not eccentric, she has a lively sense of humor both about herself and about the world at large, and her ready laughter is one of her most characteristic and appealing traits. It is also, of course, one that isn’t readily apparent in print. For this reason, I have sometimes indicated in brackets where her laughter seemed indivisible from the tone and mood of her remarks.
Preparing this book has reminded me again of how much I’ve enjoyed talking with Anne Rice over the years, and I take pleasure now in sharing these conversations with her readers who want to hear her speak in her own voice and to know her for themselves.
Claremont, California
October 8, 1995
CHRONOLOGY
1941
Born October 4 in New Orleans
1956
Her mother, Katherine O’Brien, dies
1957
Her father, Howard O’Brien, remarries and moves the family to Richardson, Texas, a suburb of Dallas
Meets Stan Rice at Richardson High School
1959
Graduates from high school and enters Texas Women’s University in Denton
1960
Moves to San Francisco
1961
Returns to Texas and marries Stan Rice on October 14
1962
Returns to San Francisco with Stan
1964
Graduates from San Francisco State University with a B.A. in Political Science
1966
Daughter Michele is born on September 21
1969
Moves to Berkeley
Writes a short story called “Interview with the Vampire”
1970
Michele is diagnosed with leukemia
1972
Michele dies on August 5
1973
Writes Interview with the Vampire as a novel
1974
Attends Squaw Valley writers’ conference where she meets agent Phyllis Seidel, who agrees to represent Interview with the Vampire and sells it to editor Vicky Wilson at Knopf
1976
Interview is published
1978
Son Christopher born on March 11
1979
The Feast of All Saints is published by Simon & Schuster
1980
Moves back to San Francisco to a Victorian in the Castro District
1982
Cry to Heaven is published by Knopf
1983
The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty by “A. N. Roquelaure” is published by Dutton
1984
Beauty’s Punishment, the second Roquelaure, is published by Dutton
1985
Exit to Eden by “Anne Rampling” is published by Arbor House under editor John Dodds’s Belvedere Books imprint Beauty’s Release, the third Roquelaure, is published by Dutton
The Vampire Lestat is published by Knopf
1986
Belinda, the second Rampling, is published by John Dodds at Arbor House
John Dodds dies of cancer
1988
The Queen of the Damned is published by Knopf Returns to New Orleans and buys a house on Philip St.
1989
Moves back to New Orleans permanently and buys a house in the Garden District
The Mummy: Or Ramses the Damned is published by Ballantine Books
1990
The Witching Hour is published by Knopf
1991
Her father, Howard O’Brien, dies at age seventy-four
1992
The Tale of the Body Thief is published by Knopf
1993
Lasher is published by Knopf
Writes screenplay for Interview with the Vampire under a contract with David Geffen
1994
Taltos is published by Knopf
Film of Interview with the Vampire is released
1995
Memnoch the Devil is published by Knopf
Writes screenplay for The Witching Hour for David Geffen
1996
Servant of the Bones is published by Knopf
Copyright © 2010 by Michael Riley. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.