The Groundbreaking Legacy of Anne Rice, the Woman Who Humanized Monsters

In a tribute to Anne Rice’s legacy, we’ve gathered eleven of her novels as a snapshot of her revolutionary career.

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  • Photo Credit: Book Photo by Loren Cutler on Unsplash; photo of Anne Rice from the cover of her book Called Out of Darkness

Anne Rice was born Howard Allen Frances O’Brien in New Orleans in 1941. Her parents wanted her to be a woman who could control her own destiny and thought her name would give her an advantage in life. While she went by Anne both colloquially and legally, she certainly did embody the bold nature her original name intended. Anne Rice passed away on December 11, 2021—and her legacy endures.

Related: Vampires, Witches, and More: The 9 Best Anne Rice Books

It’s rare for a writer to admit that one of the biggest books of their career was a fluke, but that’s exactly what makes Rice so exceptional. She wrote The Interview with the Vampire after losing her five-year-old daughter to leukemia. Turning back to a short story, she put her grief into the story about blood and created complex vampires who were tragic and terrifying in their opulence. But humanizing vampires sparked a bit of controversy when the novel was first published in 1976. Critics weren’t ready to see a creature that was nuanced and more than the singular blood-thirsty monster. The criticism caused her to turn away from horror until 1985. When she returned to The Vampire Chronicles with The Vampire Lestat, the world was ready for her modern take on the vampire genre.

In one book, Rice single-handedly expanded the mythos of the vampire. Through Louis, we sympathize with the vampire as opposed to the victims. We see the struggle he lives with even though he is powerful, enigmatic, and immortal. Rice made him both the monster and the victim, allowing her readers to explore and identify with this clashing duality within themselves. Her characters live on the fringes of society, rejected or rejecting, they exist in a multitude of layers in a way that characters weren’t frequently represented at the time.

Being one of a handful of women writing horror in the 1980’s certainly contributed to her ability to create diverse and unique perspectives. In a time when the genre was largely dominated by men, Rice wrote luscious, sensual, and mysterious books that allowed her to influence the industry while standing out. Readers flocked to her Gothic themes and haunting atmospheres. No matter what genre she wrote in, she was recognizable and remarkable.

Her career spanned over forty years. In that time, Rice wrote 38 novels and several short stories; saw four of her novels adapted into film and two into television shows; and wrote several pilots for independent shows. But her most profound lasting impact is how she launched the vampire into a character trope that readers identify with today.

In tribute to Anne Rice’s legacy, we’ve gathered eleven of her novels spanning every series and genre she wrote as a snapshot of her impressive—and beloved—career.

Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice

Interview with the Vampire

By Anne Rice

This iconic book launched Rice’s career and put vampires into the mainstream like never before. A journalist interviews Louis—a vampire tortured by his existence—who recalls the story of his life. Told with lush prose, it spans centuries and continents, introducing us to a complex vampire society filled with dastardly villains and tragic heroes. The book launched a thirteen-book series, a blockbuster film, and will be premiering a television series in 2022.

Related: 12 Vampire Horror Books to Sink Your Teeth Into

Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice
horror books about witches the witching hour

The Witching Hour

By Anne Rice

Expanding on the supernatural society first seen in Queen of the Damned, The Witching Hour is the first in the Lives of the Mayfair Witch trilogy. The story follows Rowan Mayfair, a neurosurgeon with powers she doesn’t understand. When she finds a drowned man and brings him back to life, they embark on a journey of understanding, discovery, and love. Going between past and present, The Witching Hour spans four centuries of Mayfair history, culminating in a shocking end.

Related: 13 Horror Books About Witches That Will Cast a Spell on You

horror books about witches the witching hour
best anne rice books

Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt

By Anne Rice

Rice wrestled with her Catholic faith over the course of her life. In 1998, she returned to the church and wrote a new novel. Christ the Lord follows the fictional life of Jesus Christ as a child. It’s an engrossing novel told in the first person perspective of a character over two billion people worship. Rice dedicated enormous research into building a world that is historically accurate, all while portraying the characters with compassion and humanity. The second book in the series, The Road to Cana, was published in 2008. However, by 2010, Rice turned away from religion and announced no plans to release the third and final book.

Related: Straight Out of Hell: 10 Sinister Tales of Holy Horror

best anne rice books
anne rice's the mummy, a romance novel for fans of the mummmy

The Mummy, or Ramses the Damned

By Anne Rice

Last awakened during Cleopatra’s reign, Ramses wakes in Edwardian London. He was once known as Ramses the Great, but after drinking from the elixir of life, he is immortal—and cursed. In a desperate attempt to resurrect his long-dead love, Ramses makes a decision that could doom the world. It took eighteen years before fans saw the sequel, The Passion of Cleopatra, which she co-authored with her son Christopher Rice. The third book, The Reign of Osiris, is scheduled to be published in 2022.

Related: These Corpses Became Mummies in the Basement of a German Cathedral

anne rice's the mummy, a romance novel for fans of the mummmy
Angel Time by Anne Rice

Angel Time

By Anne Rice

When assassin Toby O’Dare is contacted by a seraphim and offered a chance at redemption, he jumps at the opportunity. He’s transported to thirteenth-century England. where he must right historical wrongs in order to salvage his own humanity. Rice’s journey with religion is clearly at the core of the narrative. Angel Time focuses on the themes of redemption, salvation, and forgiveness—with a paranormal edge.

Angel Time by Anne Rice
Pandora by Anne Rice

Pandora

By Anne Rice

The New Tales of the Vampires series is a spin-off from The Vampire Chronicles, featuring secondary characters and focusing on their stories. David Talbot has set out to chronicle various Undead lives. He meets Pandora in a Paris café where he convinces her to tell him her life story.  We begin in Imperial Rome and travel across two centuries as we learn of her vampiric life. Both this book and the sequel, Vittorio the Vampire, are Rice’s only vampire novels in which Lestat doesn’t appear.

Related: 19 Vampire Movies that will Make Your Blood Run Cold

Pandora by Anne Rice
The Wolf Gift by Anne Rice

The Wolf Gift

By Anne Rice

While Rice rejected claims that The Wolf Gift was her return to supernatural storytelling after her Christ the Lord novels, many of her fans saw it as exactly that. Journalist Reuben Golding is attacked by an unseen beast while on assignment. The bite begins a metamorphosis that is both horrific and ecstatic—while he is hunted by the police, scientists, and the media. Once again, themes of salvation and redemption are evident, as well as transformation as Golding struggles to fully embrace being both wolf and man.

Related: Portrayals of Werewolves Across Media That'll Have You Howling for More

The Wolf Gift by Anne Rice
The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice

The Feast of All Saints

By Anne Rice

Her second novel, The Feast of All Saints is a historical fiction novel about the gens de couleur libres—free people of color—and their life in New Orleans before the Civil War. A richly researched book that follows multiple characters through their lives with nuanced detail and breathtaking atmosphere, it’s a story that continues to sweep readers away. The novel was made into a movie with a star-studded cast including James Earl Jones and Forest Whitaker in 2001.

The Feast of All Saints by Anne Rice
Exit to Eden by Anne Rice

Exit to Eden

By Anne Rice

One of two novels published under the pseudonym Anne Rampling, Exit to Eden is her second BDSM romance novel. Lisa is a perfectionist. The last thing she expects when she chooses Eliot as her client is to fall in love. Through risqué sexual escapades, Lisa and Eliot find a way to balance the desires of not just their bodies, but their hearts. A movie was made, but Rice denounced it after it was rewritten into a buddy-cop romcom starring Dan Aykroyd and Rosie O’Donnell.

Related: 17 Romantic Horror Movies That'll Make Your Blood Run Cold

Exit to Eden by Anne Rice
pen names

The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty

By A.N. Roquelaure

The Sleeping Beauty Quartet is Rice’s first erotic BDSM romance series, this time published under the pseudonym A.N. Roquelaure. They’re loosely based on the fairytale Sleeping Beauty and follow Beauty through various sexual exploits. It wasn’t until the mid-90’s that Rice admitted to writing the novels, and in 2015, she finally completed the quartet when she published Beauty’s Kingdom.

Related: Til Death Do Us Part: 7 Romances That Ended in Murder

pen names
Called Out of Darkness by Anne Rice

Called Out of Darkness: A Spiritual Confession

By Anne Rice

Rice’s autobiography takes readers through her spiritual journey to rediscovering her Catholic faith. She takes readers from her religious upbringing, Catholic schools, and how she lost her faith in adulthood. Though she proclaimed herself an atheist, her questions towards faith never left her. Rice bares her soul and reveals the questions she’s always struggled with when it comes to God and faith. Called Out of Darkness is a riveting read that illuminates many of the themes her books touch on through a far more intimate lens.

Called Out of Darkness by Anne Rice