Yeah. she converted. There's an epilogue to her Jesus novel where she recounts her Catholic upbringing and her recent return to the church. Cannot imagine its a marketing tactic, as her sales were certianly not suffering, and the book is excessively conservative Christian.
2006-06-21 13:44:56
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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According to her, she left the Catholic Church when she was in college. Recently, she returned and was mystified at the way some faiths are now considering Jesus. This is no marketing tactic, just a simple reaffirmation of her faith.
2006-06-22 12:49:23
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answer #2
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answered by katj1250 3
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She didn't convert she returned to her catholic faith. She was raised in the church and she found it hard later in life to escape from the power of earlier beliefs.
2006-06-21 21:10:24
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answer #3
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answered by ambrinker1 6
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Those of Anne Rice's generation, who were raised in the Catholic church, have an extremely difficult time escaping its influence.
As the motto goes: "Give 'em to us when they're young, and we'll have 'em for life!"
2006-06-21 21:01:22
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answer #4
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answered by St. Hell 5
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Ann re-joined the Roman Catholic church; read her book "Christ The Lord: Out of Egypt," it's pretty good!
2006-06-21 20:41:56
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answer #5
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answered by thekilierdonut 3
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She left the Catholic church because of a crisis of faith when her daughter died...and finally healed enough to return to it. There's nothing cynical about it.
2006-06-22 03:34:36
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answer #6
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answered by galaxiquestar 4
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At this stage in history and you're making a federal case of it? Probably promo.
2006-06-21 20:44:43
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answer #7
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answered by vanamont7 7
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