Anne Rice, what are you ON?
I nearly fell off my chair in disbelief at Anne Rice's reaction to critical reviews of Blood Canticle on Amazon. She replies, in a big fat tantrum the like of which I have rarely seen, to the people who have posted 'outrageously negative' comments:
"You are interrogating this text from the wrong perspective. Indeed, you aren't even reading it. You are projecting your own limitations on it."
Sorry, you can't say that, Anne. You can't say that people are reading your books the wrong way, or that they should only read them with the correct perspective snapped firmly into place, like a set of swimming goggles.
"And no, I have no intention of allowing any editor ever to distort, cut, or otherwise mutilate sentences that I have edited and re-edited, and organized and polished myself. I fought a great battle to achieve a status where I did not have to put up with editors making demands on me, and I will never relinquish that status. For me, novel writing is a virtuoso performance."
No one is that good. Still, it gave me a badly needed laugh after a morning spent in a seminar on focus groups.
ETA: although it strikes me that laughing might not be entirely fair. On second reading her diatribe suggests that she's not quite right, somehow, mentally.
"You are interrogating this text from the wrong perspective. Indeed, you aren't even reading it. You are projecting your own limitations on it."
Sorry, you can't say that, Anne. You can't say that people are reading your books the wrong way, or that they should only read them with the correct perspective snapped firmly into place, like a set of swimming goggles.
"And no, I have no intention of allowing any editor ever to distort, cut, or otherwise mutilate sentences that I have edited and re-edited, and organized and polished myself. I fought a great battle to achieve a status where I did not have to put up with editors making demands on me, and I will never relinquish that status. For me, novel writing is a virtuoso performance."
No one is that good. Still, it gave me a badly needed laugh after a morning spent in a seminar on focus groups.
ETA: although it strikes me that laughing might not be entirely fair. On second reading her diatribe suggests that she's not quite right, somehow, mentally.
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Silly Anne.
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She needs a deflation of her ego, first, and then a really, really good editor. Neither are likely to happen, so we'll just get to laugh at her, I suppose.
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... err ...
Well, sort of.
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Actually, it's not. What it really is like is reading the response of a fanfic writer who has been sharing her stories with no one but her devoted friends/fans who tell her how wonderful they are - and then, all of a sudden, she falls over this nest of fanfic critics who have been happily taking her (very bad) stories to pieces, and she's outraged because, obviosuly, they just don't get it - so how dare they express an opinion? The idea that because she's put so much emotional energy into communing with the character that her writing must be great is, well, it's so amateur. In the worst possible sense.
Oh my.
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The fanfic writer analogy rings true - this last part reminds me of someone saying that unless the horrible reviews stop, they aren't going to write anything else, ever! Considering the amount of people that apparently love the vampire chronicles, it's also petlant and ungrateful of her to say that she's glad it's over.
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Rice will turn 63 next month, and the death of her husband Stan while she was writing Blood Canticle seems to have hit her hard. She had been married to him for 41 years and she said he was her model for Lestat.
So I guess that explains it.
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It seems to have drawn overwhelming reactions for fans of many different fandoms and (thanks perhaps to LJ and similar public debate areas) many are not of Anne Rice's fandom.
To me the rant reads as either a very immature hissy fit or a way of lashing out at pent up frustration and pressure from countless different things.
It is a pity for her and for genuine fans of her work as this is undoubtly what she will be remembered for. Not her dead-tree works but an internet attack on people who were expressing their personal opinions on what the end of a favourite series.
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I think she's gone off the rails a bit since her husband died, either that or she has all her mail delivered to her old house, which I suppose she might have kept.