"I'm always looking, and I'm always asking questions"
About this Quote
Restlessness is Anne Rice's engine, and she admits it plainly here: a life spent scanning the shadows and interrogating whatever stares back. "Always looking" is the novelist's predatory attention, the practiced refusal to let the world stay ordinary. "Always asking questions" adds the moral pressure. She isn't just collecting pretty gothic surfaces; she's worrying them, testing their seams, refusing easy answers about desire, faith, guilt, and power.
The line also works as a quiet rebuke to certainty. Rice came out of Catholicism, fought with it, returned to it, and kept arguing with God on the page the whole time. That spiritual oscillation is baked into the cadence of "always... always": devotion without arrival. It's the posture of someone who understands belief as a process, not a verdict. In her vampire novels especially, immortality isn't a power fantasy so much as a long cross-examination. Lestat and Louis don't stop to "find themselves"; they keep investigating what a self even is when time stops cooperating.
There's a craft subtext, too. Rice was famous for lush sensory writing, but the lushness is in service of inquiry: if you look hard enough at a velvet curtain, you can uncover a theology; if you question a kiss, you can map a hierarchy. The sentence reads like an artistic manifesto disguised as a personal habit: stay curious, stay unsettled, keep the lantern moving.
The line also works as a quiet rebuke to certainty. Rice came out of Catholicism, fought with it, returned to it, and kept arguing with God on the page the whole time. That spiritual oscillation is baked into the cadence of "always... always": devotion without arrival. It's the posture of someone who understands belief as a process, not a verdict. In her vampire novels especially, immortality isn't a power fantasy so much as a long cross-examination. Lestat and Louis don't stop to "find themselves"; they keep investigating what a self even is when time stops cooperating.
There's a craft subtext, too. Rice was famous for lush sensory writing, but the lushness is in service of inquiry: if you look hard enough at a velvet curtain, you can uncover a theology; if you question a kiss, you can map a hierarchy. The sentence reads like an artistic manifesto disguised as a personal habit: stay curious, stay unsettled, keep the lantern moving.
Quote Details
| Topic | Learning |
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