Blackwood Farm by Anne Rice

Blackwood Farm (The Vampire Chronicles, #9)

by Anne Rice

Perennial bestseller Anne Rice fuses her two uniquely seductive strains of narrative—her Vampire legend and her lore of the Mayfair witches—to give us a world of classic deep-south luxury and ancestral secrets.

Welcome to Blackwood Farm: soaring white columns, spacious drawing rooms, bright, sun-drenched gardens, and a dark strip of the dense Sugar Devil Swamp. This is the world of Quinn Blackwood, a brilliant young man haunted since birth by a mysterious doppelgänger, “Goblin,” a spirit from a dream world that Quinn can’t escape and that prevents him from belonging anywhere. When Quinn is made a Vampire, losing all that is rightfully his and gaining an unwanted immortality, his doppelgänger becomes even more vampiric and terrifying than Quinn himself.

As the novel moves backwards and forwards in time, from Quinn’s boyhood on Blackwood Farm to present day New Orleans, from ancient Athens to 19th-century Naples, Quinn seeks out the legendary Vampire Lestat in the hope of freeing himself from the spectre that draws him inexorably back to Sugar Devil Swamp and the explosive secrets it holds.

A story of youth and promise, of loss and the search for love, of secrets and destiny, Blackwood Farm is Anne Rice at her mesmerizing best.

Reviewed by inlibrisveritas on

4 of 5 stars

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This was the typical Anne Rice style that I love, with it's wonderful details and real characters. The only issue I had was with Tarquin (Quinn) himself, man was he stupid at times and it seemed to be kind of whiny. Overall it was pretty good though, but don't read it if you're expecting a lot of Lestat or any of the other previous characters because you will be dissapointed.

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  • Started reading
  • 1 May, 2010: Finished reading
  • 1 May, 2010: Reviewed