Risingshadow
Speculative Fiction Books
  • About
    • Home
    • Articles
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    • Staff Members
    • Newsletter
    • Finnish (FI)
  • Books
    • New Releases
    • Coming Soon
    • Books of the Year
    • Bookshelves Activity
    • Recently Added
    • Advanced Search
    • Reviews / Comments
    • Genres and Tags
    • * Submit Book
  • Community
    • Discussions
    • - Recent Messages
    • - Recent Topics
    • - Hot Topics
    • - Popular Topics
    • - Search
    • CHALLENGES
    • - Reading Challenge
    • - Book Trivia Quiz
  • Home
  • Books
  • Anne Rice
  • Servant of the Bones

Servant of the Bones

by Anne Rice
Servant of the Bones by Anne Rice
★ 7.00 / 2
1231456789110

In a new and major novel, the creator of fantastic universes of vampires and witches takes us now into the world of Isaiah and Jeremiah, and the destruction of Solomon's Temple, to tell the story of Azriel, Servant of the Bones.

He is ghost, genii, demon, angel - pure spirit made visible. He pours his heart out to us as he journeys from an ancient Babylon of royal plottings and religious upheavals to Europe of the Black Death and on to the modern world. There he finds himself, amidst the towers of Manhattan, in confrontation with his own human origins and the dark forces that have sought to condemn him to a life of evil and destruction.

 

Amazon: Check Best Offer

Horror
Release date: 1996

Book Order
Amazon
Kindle
Audible
Amazon CA
Amazon UK
Amazon Europe

Your Rating
☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆☆
Standard Shelves

Readers also enjoyed

Tales Nocturnal
★ 10.00 / 10
Dreamsongs: A RRetrospective
★ 8.84 / 12
The Black Phone and Other Stories: 20th Century Ghosts
★ 8.64 / 14
Night Shift
★ 8.56 / 18
Fevre Dream
★ 8.46 / 20
The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
★ 8.40 / 15
We Have Always Lived in the Castle
★ 8.34 / 12

Join the Discussion
You can post as a guest or sign in for more features.
Have questions about this book or want to share your thoughts? Join the conversation!
Anne Rice

Anne Rice

Before vampires glittered or brooded on screen, they whispered secrets in Anne Rice’s richly imagined worlds—sensual, gothic, and unafraid to bleed into the philosophical. Best known for Interview with the Vampire, she didn’t just redefine the vampire novel—she gave it a soul. Rice’s immortals weren’t monsters hiding in the shadows; they were conflicted, emotional, endlessly introspective beings asking what it meant to live forever in a world constantly changing.

Read more ...

Born in New Orleans in 1941, Rice was raised in a city where history lingers like fog, and where ghosts—real or imagined—seem to breathe through the ironwork and old stone. That Southern Gothic influence runs through her work, not just in setting but in mood. Her novels feel like candlelit confessionals, where beauty, pain, religion, and sensuality collide. As a child, she was named Howard Allen (after her father) and later chose the name Anne. The act of self-renaming feels fitting for someone who would spend her life exploring transformation—both physical and existential.

Rice’s journey into fiction wasn’t linear. After the death of her young daughter, she poured her grief into writing, crafting the haunting voice of Louis, the melancholy narrator of Interview with the Vampire. Published in 1976, the novel didn’t fit neatly into genre boxes. It was horror, yes—but also philosophy, theology, and longing. Over the years, the book evolved from cult classic to cultural milestone, especially after Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt brought The Vampire Chronicles to Hollywood in the '90s.

Beyond vampires, Rice ventured into witches (The Lives of the Mayfair Witches), angels, mummies, even a retelling of the life of Christ. She defied literary expectations, switching genres with a boldness that both confused and fascinated critics. Still, her fingerprints were always present—lavish prose, tortured characters, and a near-obsessive focus on identity, faith, and redemption.

Though often associated with horror, Rice's novels are just as much about humanity as they are about the supernatural. Her characters suffer from loneliness, guilt, and longing for connection. They’re gods in decay, clinging to memory. For readers, the allure was never just in the blood—it was in the way she gave myth emotional weight.

Over the course of her career, Rice sold over 150 million copies of her books. But she remained, at heart, a deeply personal writer. In one interview, she reflected, “My vampires were a metaphor for the lost, the outcast, the person who feels different.” That empathy is why her stories resonate—not because they’re fantastical, but because they’re achingly human underneath the glamour and the night.

Anne Rice passed away in 2021, but her influence lives on. She didn’t just create iconic characters—she opened a door for writers who saw darkness not as something to fear, but as something to understand. In a literary world that often demands tidy labels, Rice dared to be messy, emotional, and extravagant. And in doing so, she became unforgettable.

More books by Anne Rice

Blood Communion: A Tale of Prince Lestat (The Vampire Chronicles #13)
Unrated
Ramses the Damned: The Passion of Cleopatra (Ramses the Damned #2)
Unrated
Prince Lestat and the Realms of Atlantis (The Vampire Chronicles #12)
★ 6.00 / 1
Beauty's Kingdom (The Sleeping Beauty Quartet #4)
Unrated
Prince Lestat (The Vampire Chronicles #11)
★ 5.50 / 2
The Wolves of Midwinter (The Wolf Gift Chronicles #2)
Unrated
The Wolf Gift (The Wolf Gift Chronicles #1)
★ 6.00 / 1
Of Love and Evil (Songs of the Seraphim #2)
★ 2.00 / 1
Angel Time (Songs of the Seraphim #1)
★ 2.00 / 1
The Road to Cana (Christ the Lord #2)
★ 2.00 / 1
Out of Egypt (Christ the Lord #1)
★ 2.00 / 1
Blood Canticle (The Vampire Chronicles #10)
★ 5.26 / 4
Blackwood Farm (The Vampire Chronicles #9)
★ 7.76 / 4
Blood and Gold (The Vampire Chronicles #8)
★ 6.20 / 5
Merrick (The Vampire Chronicles #7)
★ 6.00 / 5
Vittorio the Vampire (New Tales of the Vampires)
★ 5.00 / 5
Pandora (New Tales of the Vampires)
★ 6.76 / 4
The Vampire Armand (The Vampire Chronicles #6)
★ 6.28 / 7
Violin
★ 6.50 / 2
Memnoch the Devil (The Vampire Chronicles #5)
★ 6.00 / 4
Taltos (Lives of the Mayfair Witches #3)
★ 8.00 / 3
Lasher (Lives of the Mayfair Witches #2)
★ 6.00 / 3
The Tale of the Body Thief (The Vampire Chronicles #4)
★ 7.16 / 12
The Witching Hour (Lives of the Mayfair Witches #1)
★ 6.76 / 4
The Mummy or Ramses the Damned (Ramses the Damned #1)
★ 6.66 / 3
The Queen of the Damned (The Vampire Chronicles #3)
★ 7.30 / 31
The Vampire Lestat (The Vampire Chronicles #2)
★ 7.76 / 33
Beauty's Release (The Sleeping Beauty Quartet #3)
★ 4.00 / 2
Beauty's Punishment (The Sleeping Beauty Quartet #2)
★ 5.66 / 3
The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty (The Sleeping Beauty Quartet #1)
★ 4.30 / 10
Cry to Heaven
★ 10.00 / 1
The Feast of All Saints
Unrated
Interview with the Vampire (The Vampire Chronicles #1)
★ 7.24 / 57


^ Top
Follow Us: Newsletter | Facebook | X | Mastodon | RSS
Hosted by Planeetta Internet Oy
© 1996 - 2026 Risingshadow. All rights reserved.
This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website.
Privacy Policy