Danse Macabre (novel)

Danse Macabre  
Author(s) Laurell K. Hamilton
Country United States
Language English
Series Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter
Genre(s) Horror, Mystery, Erotic novel
Publisher Berkley Books (Berkley edition)
Publication date June 27, 2006 (Berkley edition)
Media type Print
Pages 496 p. (Berkley edition)
ISBN ISBN 0-425-20797-8 (Berkley edition)
OCLC Number 66526961
Dewey Decimal 813/.54 22
LC Classification PS3558.A443357 D36 2006
Preceded by Micah
Followed by The Harlequin

Danse Macabre is the fourteenth book in the Anita Blake: Vampire Hunter series of horror/mystery/erotica novels by Laurell K. Hamilton.

Contents

Plot introduction

Anita's adventures continue, as a possible pregnancy threatens to force her to change her already unstable relationship with her several lovers. Meanwhile, Anita deals with the arrival of several master vampires and their retainers for a vampire ballet sponsored by Jean-Claude, her own developing powers, and the increasing interest of the Mother of Darkness. As with the past several books, Anita's ardeur complicates her efforts by forcing her to have frequent sex with her various lovers.

Explanation of the title

Danse Macabre is French for Dance of Death. The phrase historically refers to a late-medieval allegory of the universality of death, in which Death personified summons people to the world beyond the grave despite their objections.[1] Originally a dramatic performance, in the centuries since it has been represented in art, poetry, and music.

The modern superstition is simply that "Death" appears at midnight every year on Halloween. He calls forth the dead from their graves to dance for him while he plays his fiddle. The skeletons dance until the rooster crows at dawn, when they must return to their graves until the next year.

Within the novel, "Danse Macabre" is the name of the vampire ballet company that performs during the course of the novel's events. It also refers to the general "vampire politics" that serve as the central conflict in the plot. Although "Danse Macabre" is also the name of a vampire-themed nightclub owned by Jean-Claude, the nightclub appears only briefly at the end of this novel.

Plot summary

Summary

Danse Macabre appears to take place a few weeks after the events of Incubus Dreams and almost immediately after the events of Micah, assuming that the series of serial killings that Anita's friend Ronnie refers to as occurring two weeks earlier are the killings Anita investigates in Incubus Dreams.

Unlike the previous thirteen novels, neither Anita's role as a Federal Marshal nor her job as a zombie animator plays any part in this novel. Instead, Anita must juggle a series of problems arising from her own increasing power, Jean-Claude's vampire politics, and her own personal life, complicated in this case by Anita's apparent pregnancy.

Ultimately, Anita resolves most of these conflicts:

Unresolved plotlines

Due to the small amount of time lapsed in this novel (the events last only a day), Anita is unable to resolve any of the plotlines left open in Incubus Dreams, and leaves several questions unresolved in this book as well.

Characters in Danse Macabre

Major characters

Danse Macabre features the following major characters.

Other characters

Recurring characters include:

Non-recurring characters include:

Augustine: Master of the City of Chicago; Craves the ardeur; animal to calls are lions.

Pierce: A werelion under command of Augustine.

Merlin: Unofficially the Merlin of urban legend. A very powerful master vampire created by Marmee Noir who runs a ballet tour of other vampires. Animal to call: birds

Adonis: Part of Merlin's travelling dance troupe.

Major themes

Trivia/notes

Critical reception

The critical reception of Danse Macabre has been mixed.

. . . after 13 erotically charged books, boredom has reared its ugly head for the 14th novel in Laurell K. Hamilton's Anita Blake series, "Danse Macabre" (Berkley; $25.95), as eroticism becomes mere description . . .

So the stage is set for intrigue. Yet the words and actions Hamilton has her characters say and do seem more of a writing exercise than elements of true portrayal.[2]

Release details

References

  1. ^ "Dance of Death". Catholic Encyclopedia. 2011.01.10. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04617a.htm. 
  2. ^ Folsom, Robert (2006-07-17). "'Danse Macabre' by Laurell K. Hamilton; 'The Lies of Locke Lamora' by Scott Lynch". Kansas City Star. 
  3. ^ Shindler, Dorman T (2006-08-20). "7th Anita Blake novel builds on erotic aura". Denver Post: p. F13. ISSN 19302193. 

External links

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