Do NOT trust Anne Rice

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Title: Do not trust Anne Rice
Creator: rsasai
Date(s): 2017
Medium: Tumblr post
Fandom: Vampire Chronicles
Topic: The possible return of Anne Rice
External Links:
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Do NOT trust Anne Rice was a meta essay posted by rsasai in response to news that there would be a television adaptation of Anne Rice's Interview with the Vampire.

The original post has since been deleted. One reblog from May 22nd, 2017 shows the post had 96,328 notes.

Do NOT trust Anne Rice

Hello, Vampire Chronicles fans.

Sit down. We need to have a chat.

You see, while some people are very much excited for a new show about our pompous king of the assholes (and I say this as a term of endearment, having loved Lestat since I was a depressed teenager living in New York, shuffling through my mom’s fiction section) we need to pause and remember this:

Anne Rice does not support fan fiction or anything that is not glowing praise.

Read it again, slowly.

Anne Rice does not support fan fiction or anything that is not glowing praise.

This is difficult for younger fans to understand, but let’s take a walk down memory lane.

She has threatened to sue writers in the past. She is one of the most prolific writers of our generation, and she does not support people using her characters for their own work.

In fact, in 2000 she went on a binge-attack against her fans. She threatened legal action against fans who wrote or drew her characters, but especially those who wrote with them. She sent them weeks of harassing letters and doxxed them on the internet.

Let me repeat that.

She doxxed people who wrote fan fiction.

She harassed them online and threatened to contact employers.

She used her fans to outright attack other fans.

This isn’t even something she can just shake off now, with the comment of “It was so long ago” because she did this to a writer who wrote commentary on her story in 2013.

In 2013.

While it was not that she wrote fan fiction, she still shows that she has no respect for people who are in fandom.

Remember those disclaimers used in fan fics, at the beginning? “I do not own …. ”? Yeah, a lot of that has to do with the fact that Anne Rice and others like her would attack fandoms and threaten them, and was in hopes that they would just leave us alone. She didn’t.

In short: Do not trust Anne Rice. I love her writing, I have read every book she has even written, but I do not trust her.

You shouldn’t, either.[1]

Reactions & Comments

Don’t not take this seriously either. She hunted down fan fictions on small privately hosted web pages as well. She doesn’t care if you put the disclaimer in the top.

She hates fan fiction and WILL try to sue you. DO NOT think this is a joke, real people received real legal paperwork from her. And this happened about ten years ago, so it wasnt a super long time ago.[2]

I’m not a huge fan of Anne Rice for this purpose, and because I think he works are terribly racist. But this is important, especially for younger fanfic writers and those just getting into fandoms like hers.[2]

FR though, I started writing during this era, though I never posted anything.

DO NOT write or draw anything relating to her series. She WILL attack you for it, even if you think you’re paying her a compliment. She will come after you, she will threaten you, harass you, send people after you, and doxx you.

DO NOT DRAW OR WRITE ABOUT ANYTHING RELATING TO HER SERIES AT ALL IN ANY CAPACITY EVEN IF YOU MEAN IT AS A COMPLIMENT TO HER. SHE WILL NOT APPRECIATE IT, SHE WILL HURT YOU FOR IT.[2]

She’s been like this since Geocities was the big place to have spec (that’s what fics used to be called, specs, as in speculative fiction) pages back in the mid 90s.

She use to threaten to sue anyone she found posting specs anywhere, and there was a whole underground network of people to share specs and fan art (which she also would threaten to sue over).

Anne Rice has always been kind of a twat about fan works based on her mediocre writing.[1]

She’s harassed people quite recently. @jennytrout Wanna gossip?[1]

[...] She (Anne Rice) made a post about this website that was made by a writer who apparently wasn’t getting the sales numbers or accolades they so richly deserved. The problem wasn’t like, the nature of the business or anything, nay, my friends, nay, but the fact that people–BULLIES!–left mean reviews on Amazon. So these people whom Rice so admired would make posts where they would reveal AmazonGoodReads reviewers names and home addresses and such. One post even mentioned something like, “Between this time and that time every weekday, they go for a walk by the sea wall.” Scary, scary shit. And Rice LOVED these people.

I don’t know why I took it upon myself to argue with her. I really don’t. Maybe because I respected her so much and her support of the site was so disappointing? This was the result.[3]

So, I’m a bully. Big whoop, right? And my feelings were a little hurt, but hey, never meet (or follow on social media) your idols, right? Lesson learned, and it wasn’t like this could destroy my fond memories of how much I loved her books, right?

So, fast forward, I think it was the next year, or at least a few months later, when I wrote a post about a dumb $0.99 Kindle book about Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings in a BDSM relationship. A pathetic little troll with too much hair gel and not enough parenting ran to his goddess Anne Rice to tell her how mean, mean, mean I was being. She posted a link to a blog post made about me on the reviews-are-bullies site and said something to the effect of someone needing to teach me a lesson or someone needed to show me how it feels or something like that. To THREE. MILLION. PEOPLE.

As a fan of Anne Rice, I am confident in stating that many of her fans are not okay people. And they heeded the command of their “queen.” Yes, they referred to her as such, flooding me with emails, tweets, FB messages, anywhere they could reach me. They posted my address, screenshots of google earth images of my house, they threatened to kill me, they made graphic threats against my children, one charming gentleman on parole from his assault sentence offered to make a necklace of my teeth to present to “my queen.”

When confronted about the fact that she had unleashed all of this on me, her response was basically: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

She insisted she hadn’t done anything wrong, she couldn’t control what people were doing, and oh yes, it’s terrible that people are saying this, but she NEVER. ASKED. THEM. TO. STOP. In fact, she joined her “people of the page” in mocking my appearance, mourning the horrible lives my children must have, and continuing to insist that my “prison tats” indicated that I was a member of a gang (I have “TIME LADY” tattooed across my knuckles in the 11th Doctor era Doctor Who font). Egging them on with this coy, “Well, we shouldn’t say things like that, we’re better than that, BUT” bullshit.

Her “people of the page” also contacted one of my publishers and caused a multi-author anthology that was like, a year in the making to fold.[1]

And now it is time again to remind everyone that Anne Rice is a terrible person.

Also, its pretty incredible that apart from her books I guess, the biggest mark Anne Rice will have left on this world is to teach fanfic writers to fear the people they write fanfiction for. We will never get away from the “I don’t own the characters” disclaimers. And it’s almost entirely Anne Rice’s fault for instilling that fear. Forever.

It’d be impressive if it wasn’t so abhorrent.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Do NOT Trust Anne Rice reblog by survivest, 2017
  2. ^ a b c Do NOT trust Anne Rice reblog by spacegate
  3. ^ The result, a blog post by Jenny, entitled "Jenny Trout: Gangster Bully"