With the taste of [David's] blood comes life itself: the life that Lestat has loved and wanted to possess. Lestat takes in an entire culture, of course: its colonial past as well as its rebellious present. His fantasy is one of possessions: he wants to be David as much as he wants to have him...[the] lurid exchange of endearments, as the blood spurts and the sucking continues, hints at the deepest fear behind the vampire's kiss: not that the victims are taken against their will, but rather that the vampire's kiss releases the hidden desires that the will would repress.
haggerty, "anne rice and the queering of culture"










