HISTORY
Circumstances kept me from seeing the film until  it hit pay-per-view, in 
June of 1995. I had all five books read by  mid-July (heaving Memnoch the Devil 
across the room more than  once), tossed and turned for another week, and then 
had Another  Interview underway before month’s end. 
By the by, I had the title before ever setting a  word down. The Introduction 
and Epilogue were written solely so I could  keep the title. I don’t 
recommend going to such lengths. But what was  indulgence became a lesson in 
framing, 
something I’d not done before. It’s  different than writing flashbacks, which 
I had some practice in from when  I wrote for _Connor  Macleod_ 
(http://www.esque.com/slr/macleod/immortals_night.txt)  of the clan Macleod and 
Highlander  
fame. 
Another Interview ran to short-novel lengths, about one hundred pages in  
manuscript form (and I always write in manuscript form; even this article  was 
written so). I spent about two months writing the initial version of  the 
story, 
posting it to the _alt.books.anne-rice_ 
(http://www.eskimo.com/~ash/archive.html)  _newsgroup_ 
(news:alt.book.anne-rice)  in September 1995. 
That was that, I vowed, relieved I’d gotten it  out of my system. Then 
someone on the newsgroup relayed a too-offhand  comment Anne Rice made at a 
book 
signing, how no immortal had witnessed  Armand’s death. 
Trust me, I groaned loudly at that. I have  witnesses who will attest that I 
did not want to write  Resurrection. I had several story ideas in the hopper, 
one of which  was very promising, that I needed to flesh out. But it wouldn’t 
bloody  well go away! So I started on the story that should have ended that  
first night on the Night Island, after Daniel and Armand were reunited.  
Another two months, I figured, what harm in that? 
“Consider it a wedding gift.” 
I was happily typing the next paragraph before I  was jolted by the enormity 
of the words Lestat had uttered. My jaw hung  slack, fingers poised but 
lifeless over the keyboard. Oh God, the ideas  were a blizzard in my mind! Just 
how 
could vampires get married, really  married; what about taking the Sacrament, 
Louis wouldn’t do it halfway;  the other vampires would retch surely, or would 
the memory of desires  ingrained throughout their mortal lives let them 
swallow something so  sickly sweet. 
Sick was how I felt. No, no, I tried to convince  myself, Lestat was 
referring to their immortal mating and nothing more.  Fat bloody chance. You 
don’t 
know how Lestat’s giggling redoubled with  every rationalization I tossed out. 
 (http://www.esque.com/slr/louis_stories/afterword.html#contents) THE WRITERS’
  NEUROSIS
A written character can become a tangible  presence. I’ve discreetly polled 
other writers and learned they too have  experienced this, else I’d have sought 
out professional help the first  time I felt Louis standing at my shoulder, 
felt the touch of his fingers  there, so lightly offering his encouragement. 
Louis I know within and  without, seeing from his height as well as knowing his 
company. He was the  first character I felt this connection with. It’s as 
eerie as it is  comforting. 
Lestat is another matter. He stands out in the  yard, on the walk or crouched 
up in the walnut tree, a taunting grin ever  on his face. His eyes light up 
so when he laughs. He may jump down and  step close once in a while, but 
usually he keeps that intimate distance.  This sense of Lestat came gradually, 
a 
slow dawning that he was never  far. 
The great surprise was Armand’s appearance. I  first got a sense of him near 
the end of writing Resurrection. A  disembodied entity shaking his head. His 
displeasure prickled and I  subsequently rewrote that story’s Introduction, all 
of his scenes, and  entered into revision on Another Interview because of 
him. Then he  blindsided me one night, his approach violent and sudden. I was 
not 
aware  of him until his face was a scant inch from my own. A brush of lips 
and  then I felt the searing tear of his fangs. Pulling back, his face was  
blank, eyes a mask of caution and curiosity in their study. I leapt  straight 
from 
my bed, heart thundering, but Armand was gone. He gifted me  with the one 
violent kiss and vanished. But in that instant at the waking  edge of sleep, I 
saw him vividly. He never returned. 
 (http://www.esque.com/slr/louis_stories/afterword.html#contents) CONTINUING 
THE  STORY
The details I set down in Citadel of  Grace came to me just before I started 
my final proofread of  Resurrection and the revised version of Another 
Interview.  It was almost as if Louis nodded once and said, “Now you are  
ready.” 
Within a week all three stories were done. It  took another week to convert 
them to text and split them into post-sized  pieces; Another Interview ran to 
seven parts and  Resurrection to twenty-six when they were posted to  
alt.books.anne-rice in January 1996. Citadel of Grace ran to three  parts, but 
it wouldn
’t make it to the newsgroup until I reposted the lot  of them in October 1997 
to help bring the alt.books.anne-rice archive  up-to-date. (Last I looked, 
the archive still had a mismatched version of  Another Interview, with pieces 
from three different postings. Have  friends get the story here instead.) 
A lot was invested in writing the Louis Stories.  They pervaded my life for 
more than seven months. Louis remains a  comforting presence, a reminder of 
what I’m capable of achieving. I close  my eyes and he is there. Lestat is a 
thorn, and I can hear him laugh at me  from time to time. As much as I enjoy 
their 
company, however dear they are  to me, I cannot let them consume my 
consciousness again. The steps I  needed to take, the steps they helped me take 
to 
advance my craft, have  long since been taken. 
I have Jacques and Robert, and others, to tend  to now. But that is another 
story, as they say. 
 (http://www.esque.com/slr/louis_stories/afterword.html#contents) PANDORA & 
THE VAMPIRE  ARMAND
Perhaps the more prevalent reason for not  continuing the Louis Stories is 
that the vampiric landscape has again  changed. 
Pandora offered nothing that affected my stories and did little to  move me. 
Even with the new book, I have almost no feel for Pandora and  scant sympathy. 
Yet another contradictory image of Marius was raised,  insightful but not 
earth-shattering, and there was too much preaching for  my stomach. But perhaps 
it was a good waystation, a winding down from the  atrocity of Memnoch the 
Devil to the divinity that is The  Vampire Armand. 
Not since Interview with the Vampire has  one of the Chronicles so touched 
me. Sure, Lestat has his moments: the  reunion with Louis in The Vampire 
Lestat, 
the scenes in St. Louis  Cathedral in Tale of the Body Thief. Lestat 
acknowledges the simple  beauty around him every so often, but it undoubtedly 
pales 
next to the  Brat Prince’s own magnificence. 
The Vampire Armand made me cry, and not from the over-deification of Every  
Significant Phrase (is that distracting, or what). The book returns to the  
lush, humid prose of Interview and the rank aroma of the Venetian  canals 
permeates the telling as distinctly as did the fragrance of old  roses beyond 
the 
Quarter’s banquettes. I refrain from other comparisons as  they would give away 
too much when my point, rather, is how the book  affects the Louis Stories. 
In a nutshell, greatly. 
While certainly doable, it would take  considerable effort and a complete 
rewrite to bring my stories into line  with the latest events in the Vampire 
Chronicles. Strike the Introduction  to Resurrection, come up with another 
reason 
for the gathering on  the Night Island, reframe Daniel’s reunion with Armand 
(though Ms. Rice  seems resolute that their split cannot be breached), and draw 
in the new  vampires. Change the tone of Marius, perhaps. 
It’s not a matter of inserting new events alone.  Armand’s resurrection 
(there goes the title) takes place while Lestat is  still catatonic. Most of 
those 
I don’t have meeting until the gathering on  the Night Island are standing 
watch over Lestat in the convent. (Don’t  notice that Lestat had risen from 
that 
state at the end of  Memnoch.) 
Of course, I can drop the idea of Armand’s  return completely and say that 
once Armand was on the spot and Lestat had  roused himself enough to safely 
curl 
up in Metairie, Louis wandered off,  distraught over Lestat’s continued funk 
(mobile but far from lively), and  it was in the year after that he chanced 
upon Chérie. 
But saying that, I think I’ll let it  suffice. 
 (http://www.esque.com/slr/louis_stories/afterword.html#contents) HOW CLOSE 
IS  CLOSE
With no small trepidation did I pick up The  Vampire Armand. How close was I, 
after all, in my  suppositions? 
In all fairness, I knew if Ms. Rice ever chanced  upon my stories, she’d 
heave; I’ve not the feel for the aesthete she has,  nor do I believe any 
creature 
can be truly unchanging. The notion of a  “pesty” spirit giving rise to a new 
order of creature still makes me gag.  It’s too convenient and as pointless 
as dating the Renaissance; there is  no one day of which can be said, “here, 
everything  changed.” 
Of course, I’m no stranger to convenient plots.  My original, nagging 
question that resulted in Another Interview  was, “How could you meet Louis, 
and live 
to tell the tale?” Putting Louis  on wobbly ground emotionally was about the 
only way he’d let love sneak up  on him, and even that’s reaching. Lestat’s 
concession would undoubtedly  come with a butcher’s bill that demanded a hefty 
reckoning. And with  The Vampire Armand, it might not have been possible at 
all; no one  may ever drink from Lestat again. 
Big spoilers follow; _skip  ahead_ 
(http://www.esque.com/slr/louis_stories/afterword.html#maryann)  as needed.
It should not surprise anyone that, seeing as  the tale of Armand was written 
at all, he was around to tell the tale. I  must admit I kept waiting for “
Armand” to turn out to be some ghost only  David could see. I dreaded the 
possibility of that vicious twist. But  thankfully it never came, and yes, 
Armand had 
his resurrection. His reason  for immolation was indeed impetuous, but I wasn’
t even close on the why of  it. (I fall back on what I said before: Perhaps it
’s what he wanted  me to believe.) He was indeed in New York and needed 
concealment, though  his pain was not so great as to warrant going underground. 
His 
recovery  didn’t require anywhere near as much time as I supposed without the 
aid of  healing, immortal blood (yet another contradiction), which he did not 
seek  out. 
Louis continues to be ignored, though Armand  voiced a few new endearments 
for him. The resurrection I’d hoped for for  Louis fell to Armand instead, and 
I 
was glad to tears for it. It felt so  familiar. Armand is alive again, in 
more than body alone, and I rejoice! I  still hope for Louis, but I’m no less 
happy for Armand, and Marius for  that matter. I hope for Daniel too, of 
course, 
that Armand’s new outlook  might envelope his only fledgling. 
I had to chuckle when Armand’s maker did the  making for him. At the same 
time, I was astonished Marius did it at all,  considering the tender age of one 
of the initiates and the fact that  Marius was always so gung-ho about “thou 
shalt make no more of our  kind.” 
Figuring Louis for 6'1" (Lestat “looked up” at  him once when they were on a 
level) and Armand at 5'9", I was off a bit  there, though pretty darned close 
to their 5'11" and 5'7"  heights. 
Dora, thankfully, got no more than an  expositional rehash. Would I kill her 
off again, if I was to rewrite the  Louis Stories? Oh yes, with unconcealed 
gusto. I called Memnoch an  atrocity and my opinion is unchanged. Too much 
happened that will forever  affect Lestat and getting around that, especially 
now 
that his blood  rejects drinkers, requires a lot of rationalization and, 
bluntly put,  revisionist history. I’ve tried my hand at it with Resurrection,  
picking and choosing which details to purposefully overlook, and it’s no  
simple 
task. The Chronicles were already fraught with petty  contradictions, no more 
were needed. 
Killing off Dora is a catharsis, in essence  killing off Memnoch. Dora is so 
much a “Mary Ann”, the fan fiction  term for a personification of the author, 
and the grand irony is that the  working title for The Vampire Armand was 
Symphony for Mary  Anne. 
 (http://www.esque.com/slr/louis_stories/afterword.html#contents) SPOT THE 
MARY  ANN
So what, you may ask. Didn’t I do the same thing  with Chérie? 
To some extent, yes. (And that’s the first time  I’ve admitted that, thank 
you.) Chérie looks like me, sort of, and lives  in my house. She’s cursed with 
my gestures and nerdish bent. The opinions  she voices are mine as is her 
general outlook. 
But that’s where it ends. I’m never so  clear-headed as she, nor am I as 
quick to puzzle out a problem. Her  delight in the world is a constant struggle 
for me. Only in writing am I  as sharp or as graceful; in person, I still fight 
the cynicism of my age  and battle for every ounce of self-worth. My failures 
far exceed my  successes and I yet fear the cost of real feeling. 
No, Chérie is you, the reader. She is a placid  vehicle giving you entry into 
the behind-the-scenes lives of the vampires,  not just the spectacles Lestat 
chooses to document. She asks the questions  you might well ask, or at least 
as many as have sprung to my  mind. 
Then who am I in the Louis Stories, if not  Chérie? Why, that’s the simplest 
thing. 
I am Louis. 
Sheri Richardson
San José, California
November 8, 1998 
Postscript on Vittorio the Vampire: This  turned out to be a rather 
interesting read. My buddy Román, who did his  thesis on Fra Angelico and has a 
bit of 
an angel fetish, found it  fascinating, in fact. There was some encouragement 
for liberties I’ve  taken with the Vampire Chronicles, and on matters of faith 
Vittorio is far  closer to Louis than any other of Rice’s vampires. There was 
a familiarity  to many scenes, smacking of events surrounding Louis and Lestat
’s separate  meetings with the Paris coven, and a flagrant distrust of the 
reader that  yielded much undue repetition. Even so, I recommend reading VtV; 
his very  different point-of-view is  refreshing.





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