About me:Mortal Louis de Pointe du Lac was born in France on October fourth in 
the year 1766, to a Roman Catholic family who emigrated to North America when 
he was very young. His mother, sister and brother, Paul, lived just outside New 
Orleans on one of their two indigo plantations, named Pointe du Lac after the 
family. This was the place where Louis' brother died, after a terrible quarrel 
with Louis. Louis had always thought that he was to blame and never got over 
the guilt of his brother's death. He became self-destructive, cynical and 
desperate, and longed for the release of death, but lacked the courage to 
commit suicide. He took to frequenting taverns, whore houses and other places 
of ill repute. He got into fights and duels in order that someone might make 
the decision for him and kill him to end his misery. Vampire It was one of 
these nights, in a tavern brawl, that he caught the eye of the vampire Lestat 
de Lioncourt, who fell "fatally in love" with the tragic Creole planter, 
appeared to him as an angel and offered him an alternative to his desperate, 
meaningless life. Lestat, upon seeing for the first time Louis' "fine black 
hair" and deep green eyes, and sensing his passion, was completely and 
immediately seduced not only by Louis's beauty, but also by his tragedy and 
human heart; "He seduced the tenderness in me." Lestat made Louis into a 
vampire, his immortal companion in 1791, and it was Louis with whom he would 
live, love, and kill for nearly a century to come. However, Lestat was damaged 
from his own experiences in France and the Old World. He was not as gentle a 
tutor or as much of a friend as Louis would have liked, one of the central 
themes in Interview with the Vampire. An example of this is an anguished 
comment recalled by Louis in his memoir, where he muses: "I was thinking [...] 
how sublime friendship between Lestat and me might have been; how few 
impediments to it there would have been, and how much to be shared." While 
Louis and Lestat were often at odds with one another, they did eventually form 
an uneasy sort of truce, with Lestat gradually coming to regard his friend as a 
kind of soulmate, albeit one who resisted his "teachings" on killing and living 
life as a vampire. Interview with the Vampire details an ersatz familial 
relationship between Louis, Lestat and a third vampire, Claudia. Louis, in a 
moment of weakness, feeds from the six year old orphan, and Lestat contrives to 
make her into a vampire to, in his own words, "bind Louis to [him]." In saving 
Louis' life by giving him Claudia to love and look after, he destroyed Claudia 
by forever condemning her to the form of a six-year-old child. Louis finally 
accepted his "family," taking the "maternal" role with Claudia and finding 
contentment in their family home at Rue Royale. Claudia, however, gradually 
matured in mind (if not body) and came to hate both of her "parents" for giving 
her immortality, in her own words, "this hopeless guise, this helpless form". 
She rebelled against Lestat, attempting to kill him in 1860 and escaped with 
Louis to the Old World to look for other vampires. In Paris, the "father" and 
"daughter" finally found what they were looking for: fifteen vampires who 
disguised themselves as human mummers at the Théâtre des Vampires. However, in 
the eyes of these vampires, Louis and Claudia are criminals. They had both 
attempted to kill their maker, Lestat, and therefore ought to pay for their 
crime with their lives. Louis managed to escape death, as Lestat, who appeared 
suddenly at the Theatre, pleaded for his life. Claudia was not so fortunate. 
Louis burned down the Theatre in a rage after Claudia's death and drifted 
through the world and time with the Theatre's leader, Armand, whom he loved. 
They separated very late in the 20th century in New Orleans. In the early 
1920s, Louis later claimed to have discovered Lestat in New Orleans, lost in a 
catatonic state. Louis turned his back on him in pity and disgust. (This may be 
a fabrication by Louis to lead Daniel to Lestat's haunt, on which Lestat 
remarks in his memoir, "Louis [...] had all but drawn a map and placed an X on 
the very spot in New Orleans where I slumbered [...] and what his intentions 
were, were not clear." Lestat also mentions, in The Tale of the Body Thief, 
that Louis "made up" this scene. In The Vampire Lestat, Lestat does not mention 
meeting Louis again in New Orleans before he undertook his long sleep.) Louis 
and Lestat were reunited at the end of the novel The Vampire Lestat in 1985 
when Lestat was a rock superstar. In the events of The Queen Of The Damned, 
Louis and many other vampires came together at Maharet's house in the Sonoma 
Compound to fight against Akasha. Louis was one of the only vampires to refuse 
the powerful blood offered by Maharet and Lestat, preferring to gain strength 
with age. However at the end of Merrick, one of the Vampire Chronicles, Louis 
had put himself into the sun after making Merrick a vampire. Lestat, David 
Talbot, and Merrick then gave Louis some of their blood (Lestat and David's 
containing the power of some of the oldest and most powerful vampires in the 
world) to save Louis' life. It was noted by David Talbot that with this 
transfusion of blood Louis may have lost some of his humanity and become more 
vampiric in nature and had become almost equal to Lestat in power. 








































 
 
This is how Anne Rice Wrote it but not how it really was: 
 
 
Louis de Pointe du Lac

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