<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<marc:record xmlns:marc="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim">
   <marc:leader>00000nam a2200000 a 4500</marc:leader>
   <marc:datafield ind1="1" ind2=" " tag="100">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Rice, Anne</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="4">aut</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="e">Verfasser/-in</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1="0" ind2="0" tag="245">
      <marc:subfield code="a">The Vampire Armand</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1="0" ind2="0" tag="245">
      <marc:subfield code="b">6. Band</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1=" " ind2="1" tag="264">
      <marc:subfield code="b">Arrow Books</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="c">1999</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1="1" ind2=" " tag="490">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Chronik der Vampire</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1="1" ind2=" " tag="520">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Eternally young, angelic in appearance, the Vampire Armand returns to New Orleans where the Vampire Lestat lies in the deepest of sleeps. There, in the dark, dramatic American South, Armand tells his tale, and recalls the brutality, magnificent decadence and devil worship of his past. From a half-forgotten childhood in Russia to slavery in Constantinople; from Renaissance Venice, where he is saved from death by the dark gift of Marius, the greatest vampire of them all, to nineteenth-century Paris, where he is the leader of the Theatre des Vampires.</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1=" " ind2=" " tag="020">
      <marc:subfield code="a">9780099271475</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="9">9780099271475</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
</marc:record>
