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Angel Time: The Songs of the Seraphim, Book One
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$ 22.84
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$ 25.95 |
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$ 3.11 (12%) |
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| Item Number |
2129326 |
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Item Description...
Outline Review A Q&A with Anne Rice
 Question: You've written about many kinds of immortal or supernatural beings. What inspired you to turn to angels in this new book?Anne Rice: I have always been fascinated by the idea of angels--these perfect beings who are God's messengers, sinless, bold, and unfathomable to the human mind. I was deliciously challenged to be biblically correct about them, and theologically correct: to present Malchiah as truly perfect, yet sent to interact with my hero Toby, and commissioned therefore to take a human body and reflect human emotions and respond to Toby's human emotions. Question: How did imagining a character like Malchiah the angel differ from creating one like the vampire Lestat? Anne Rice: Well, again, Malchiah is perfect and sinless. And to make such a character appealing is a challenge; he has to reflect God's love for human beings, God's compassion. He's not sent to judge Toby; he's sent to guide him to salvation, and to enlist Toby in working for the angels on earth. He must feel things; he must have a personality, but with marvelous theological constraints. Doing Lestat was entirely different: Lestat is sinful and ferociously human, a rebel who wants to be good at being bad; a rebel who is seeking redemption but turning away from it all the time. There is a certain joy in writing about Malchiah because he is sent from God. There was never a perfect joy in writing about Lestat: Lestat suffers too much and does too many bad things with relish. Question: The hero of Angel Time is Toby O'Dare, a boy who had a tough life growing up in New Orleans and who goes on to become a skilled assassin before meeting Malchiah. How does Toby compare to your past protagonists? What is unique about him? Anne Rice: Well, Toby is deeply flawed, much like the vampires. He's an assassin, and he has done terrible things, and questionable things. But he turns around in the very first book of the series and sets out to do the bidding of the angels in helping others. I think of all those characters I've created, Toby is most like Michael Curry in The Witching Hour. But Toby has done things Michael would never do. Toby is a deeply flawed human who is offered a chance to be saved; and he takes it. Maybe he's a first among my characters in that he is given an opportunity to redeem himself through the mercy of God, and then to do good to make up for all the evil he had done before. Toby is also a crafty character. He's pragmatic. Having been a clever assassin, he knows how to plot to do good. That was interesting to me, to have him struggling to save people from harm, and having to figure out a somewhat complex way to do it. Question: People who have read your memoir Called Out of Darkness will recognize some elements of your own life in Toby's story. Did you identify with him as a character? Anne Rice: Yes, I did identify with Toby, though my life has been nothing like his. I know what it is like to struggle with an alcoholic parent; I know what it is like to care for younger siblings in an alcoholic household. But of course Toby suffers a family tragedy that I didn't suffer, and he turns to evil in a defiant way, whereas I only turned to writing about evil. Question: How did you imagine the concept of Angel Time (as opposed to Normal Time)? And what sources did you reference while reading about angels? Anne Rice: I came up with the concept of Angel Time through meditating on it; really, figuring that from God's standpoint there is no linear time. I felt certain that the angels would be able to move back and forth in our linear time, and to grasp how some one can be lifted from one century and put down in another to work a solution that then becomes part of the very future from which the original person came. I think meditation led to this definition of Angel Time, more than any actual reading. It seemed logical to me that the angels could do this. I did read theology about angels, of course, including St. Thomas Aquinas and books by Catholic writers who have studied angels and all the biblical references to them. It all starts with the Bible, of course and how angels appear in those pages. But the scholars Pascal Parente and Peter Kreeft help me to cover the sources. I stayed away from other writers' more fanciful conjectures about angels. I wanted the biblical facts, and the way that the theologians interpreted them. Question: People are clearly fascinated with angels. Why do you think even those people who do not consider themselves religious are so drawn to the idea of angels? Anne Rice: People are drawn to angels because there is a deep seated instinctive belief that they do exist, that creatures from Heaven are here on Earth looking out for us and playing a special role in our care. Of course we read of this in the Bible. And it is a very seductive idea. It's sometimes easier to pray to one's guardian angel than to pray to the saints or even to the Lord. It's easy to imagine that our guardian angel is right here with us. In my novel, Toby really does believe this, though after he suffered tragedy, he blamed the angels in charge for not stopping it. And he lived as a cursed human being for ten years.
Product Description Anne Rice returns to the mesmerizing storytelling that has captivated readers for more than three decades in a tale of unceasing suspense set in time past---a metaphysical thriller about angels and assassins.
The novel opens in the present. At its center: Toby O'Dare---a contract killer of underground fame on assignment to kill once again. A soulless soul, a dead man walking, he lives under a series of aliases---just now: Lucky the Fox---and takes his orders from "The Right Man."
Into O'Dare's nightmarish world of lone and lethal missions comes a mysterious stranger, a seraph, who offers him a chance to save rather than destroy lives. O'Dare, who long ago dreamt of being a priest but instead came to embody danger and violence, seizes his chance. Now he is carried back through the ages to thirteenth-century England, to dark realms where accusations of ritual murder have been made against Jews, where children suddenly die or disappear . . . In this primitive setting, O'Dare begins his perilous quest for salvation, a journey of danger and flight, loyalty and betrayal, selflessness and love.
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Item Specifications...
Pages 288
Dimensions: Length: 9.3" Width: 5.8" Height: 1.3" Weight: 1.05 lbs.
Binding Hardcover
Release Date Oct 27, 2009
Publisher Knopf
ISBN 1400043530 EAN 9781400043538
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Availability 3 units. Availability accurate as of Feb 11, 2012 08:54.
Usually ships within one to two business days from Momence, IL.
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Reviews - What do our customers think?
 | Anne Rice continues her departure from horror - but continues to entertain. Jan 29, 2010 |
When Anne Rice had a serious spiritual awakening, she officially put down the sword of 'horror' novelist and picked up the quill of spiritual writer. She first began by penning two novels that were excellent fictionalized retellings of periods in the life of Jesus Christ - as both a boy and later as a young man. She also wrote an auto-biographical novel that deeply explained her re-finding of her Christianity and how her path is now dedicated to her faith.
That being said, Anne Rice has still not lost her ability to tell an interesting story and to scare you. With the release of "Angel Time: The Songs Of the Seraphim", she has hopefully begun another fiction series for her old and new fans to enjoy. We are introduced to contract killer, Toby O'Dare, now living under the alias "Lucky the Fox". His dark world is turned on its ear when he is approached by a serpah who offers him a chance at redemption --- a chance to be a savior instead of a destroyer. Just what will this tormented soul do?
Lucky the Fox/O'Dare is an intelligent and well-written character and his dilemmas of the soul make for good reading. I hope we have not seen the last of him --- or his guardian angels! | | |  | You don't have to be Christian or even ''religious" to enjoy this great read! Jan 24, 2010 |
Angel Time; Anne Rice's first leap into full on fiction since finishing the Vampire Chronicles and Lives of the Mayfair Witches the same year her husband Stan Rice died, in 2002, and it's a wonderful start to the brand new series Songs of the Seraphim. Beginning with the mysterious life of a contract killer who has an icy disposition and a sardonic sort of anti-faith, going about his business before being accosted by an Angel of God with an offer for fun filled redemption, traveling in time, angel-time, fixing desperate and doomed situations. Anne is at her best with raw, poignant characters, who are energized by their emotions and their obsessions and beliefs, whether dark or light or uncertain. Anne is also at her best writing of other times and places, really pulling the reader into that far away moment effortlessly and completely and it's always an awesome adventure. It's important to say, I did not find this book preachy at all what so ever, in fact I would go so far as saying, unless you are a militant atheist, you won't find it preachy despite the clearly ''religious'' as well as spiritual facts about the plot. True it comes from a perspective of belief in the Catholic faith, but one can watch Star Wars and not necessarily believe in the Force, albeit through relatability, as with this novel. One can read this story and still enjoy it, learn from it, be inspired by it. If you practice Buddhism or Wicca or in fact are atheist but enjoy good story telling, one can relate to the layers and the values of the story. In fact, most of the book is taking place during the middle ages and it is historically factual, a trait Anne Rices is famous for in her work, but many issues are fascinatingly comparable to issues today, I don't want to give more away than that, the reader can discover it on their own. Again, I am not a Christian or a Jew, I am a spiritual man, open minded to that which is not in-your-face preachy, so very much enjoyed Angel Time. Great ending by the way! The very ending. . . . | | |  | Anne Rice is a wonderful storyteller. Jan 23, 2010 |
| I have read every book Anne Rice ever wrote and was never disappointed. Whether she writes about vampires, witches, the life of Jesus, her personal struggles or angels, her stories draw you in and envelop you. Anne fans, this book will not disappoint you. I hadn't thought about my guardian angel for years. This book reminded me that my angel is real and constantly at my side. | | |  | Captivating and addictive Jan 21, 2010 |
| Lucky the Fox is a great protag. He is completely damaged, completely dying to be accepted by someone. He wants to do the right thing. To the person he works for he wants to offer blind devotion. I enjoyed reading how Toby O'Dare became Lucky the Fox and how God's grace transformed him into closer to the person God will be proud of. It isn't a preachy tale but it engages the reader. Anne Rice can never be accused of not being able to tell a story. Rice's telling of Toby's story and first angelic mission will absolutely enthrall you. This story is completely captivating. Rice will always remain on top and the last 2 sentences of the book had me hitting google to see when book 2 hits the shelves. Anne Rice's Angel Time has you hooked to the very last words, The End. | | |  | Wonderful storytelling! Jan 16, 2010 |
It is a great book with a fascinating plot! Ok, I never read any of the authors other books, but then I am not a fan of vampire stories. I read "Christ the Lord: Out of Egypt" and I loved it too. Just too bad that Angel Time and the other Christ the Lord book are not available as Kindle books in Europe.
The story of Toby is fascinating as we see everyday that bad things happen to good people. At times we turn the wrong way just because life seems to take us into this direction. So I could really relate to Toby and how he kind of slipped into being a killer. It takes the grace of God for him to come out of there and his life changes. I personally do not feel the book to be preachy. It really sucks you in and I was reading until 1:30am and could hardly even stop then.
How come people don't mind to read stories with vamipres and black magic, but as soon as it some kind of Christian untertone it is ripped apart? If it was a story with a Hindu background it would not be torn to pieces. I feel this is kind of negatively biased and really not fair. | | | Write your own review about Angel Time: The Songs of the Seraphim, Book One
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