Anne Rice's profound connection with the city of New Orleans was integral to her identity. She was a longtime resident in the Garden District, where her former home can still be found--a part of any major tour. She understood the city. She was in time with it, the rhythm of the crowds, the pace of life, and she seemed to sense something terrifying resting beneath that overgrown southern facade. We hear cicadas and we think of sweet tea and rocking chairs. She'd think of drums in the jungle--something wild reverberating beneath all of that heat.
Part of her life's work was to capture that spirit, weave it into words and logic, and help us understand what it would be like to contend with it. It could be a hungry beast ready to infect humanity with the scourge of vampirism, or a creepy man that simply won't leave his porch, even after he's moved on. Whatever that force embodied, it had a story--one a thousand times more interesting than we could come up with, and if we'll only follow along with it and listen to what it had to say, we might be able to see the entire struggle through.