The Voodoo Queen: A Novel

Front Cover
Pelican Publishing, 1984 - Fiction - 314 pages

Witch? Sorceress? Daughter of Satan? Thief? Saint? Born in 1794, Marie Laveau reigned as the undisputed Queen of the Voodoos for nearly a century. Her beauty and powers were legendary, and caused her to be the subject of wild gossip throughout her life. She passed on her secrets to a favorite daughter, who helped her dominate the underworld of voodoo in New Orleans. "It is an absorbing tale, and the emotional undertones, the conflicts in her human relations, the overwhelming loneliness of her position, all come through the story of a strange life." Kirkus Reviews "The author creates a vivid, haunting atmosphere, which (like Marie's arts) holds the reader in spell. . . . an intriguing novel that is competently mounted and exceedingly well executed." New York Times

 

Selected pages

Contents

Chapter 1
7
Chapter 2
27
Chapter 3
53
Chapter 4
81
Chapter 5
99
Chapter 6
119
Chapter 7
137
Chapter 8
157
Chapter 10
195
Chapter 11
213
Chapter 12
239
Chapter 13
257
Chapter 14
275
Chapter 15
293
Chapter 16
305
Copyright

Chapter 9
177

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About the author (1984)

ROBERT TALLANT (1909-1957) was one of Louisiana's best-known authors and a participant in the WPA Writers' Project during the 1930s and 1940s. During the last years of his life, he was a lecturer in English at Newcomb College.

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