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Book Review: The Plot Against Heaven by Mark Kirkbride

cover art for The Plot Against Heaven by Mark Kirkbride

The Plot Against Heaven by Mark Kirkbride

Omnium Gatherum, 2020

ISBN: 13: 9781949054293

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition  Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

 

Hell is a version of Las Vegas. Heaven is an armed camp. The two places seem to be located side by side, even though elevators going to hell travel downward. Paul is making these observations as he tries to force his way into God’s inner sanctum in order to demand why his wife Kate died in an accident before her time.

 

The Plot Against Heaven soon becomes more Satan’s plot rather than Paul’s. Mark Kirkbride has written a fast-paced story that can be read in one sitting which, as Poe would recommend, is ideal for steadily building emotion to a climax. There are many surprises along the way. After all, who would expect Paul to accept a media job in hell? How could Paul be so wrong about both his and his wife’s true situation? Was Kate right in thinking that when faced with a choice between doing what is right versus doing what is necessary, doing what is right is always the correct choice?

 

Kirkbride has an interesting take on the afterlife and how heaven and hell function. There are plenty of twists and turns to keep the reader invested in Paul’s search for justice, entertained by his interaction with Satan, and caught up in the mysteries created by deception. This story is a fable/parable about our misconceptions regarding the nature of good and evil, particularly how human beings are so unaware of the pervasiveness of evil and so blind to its insidious harm. Could it be that an adventure tale is exactly the vehicle to further the deception? A chilling thought! Recommended.

 

Reviewed by Nova Hadley

Vampirates Blog Tour– Stay Tuned!

If you were a middle grader in 2005, you may remember the Vampirates books by Justin Somper. I was an elementary school media specialist then and I certainly do! There are six books in the series and if you loved vampires or pirates, you probably stumbled across them.  But then vampires went from scary to romantic, and the Vampirates were lost at sea. But the books are back in print now, and ready for a new generation. To celebrate their return, Monster Librarian is taking part in a blog tour, and later this week we will have a review up of the first book, Vampirates: Demons of the Ocean, followed shortly by a guest post from the author, Justin Somper. If you’re interested in following along, below is a schedule of where Justin Somper can been seen over the next week! Be warned, the Vampirates are coming!

 

image of list of dates for Vampirates Blog Tour

Book Review: 1000 Women in Horror, 1895-2018 by Alexandra Heller-Nicholas

cover art for 1000 Women in Horror

1000 Women in Horror, 1895-2018 by Alexandra Heller-Nicholas

BearManor Media, 2020

ISBN-13: 9781629333861

Available:  Hardcover, paperback ( Bookshop.org )

 

1000 Women in Horror, 1895-2018 is a beautiful book that includes the stars and women behind the scenes who have molded the horror genre. Heller-Nicholas provides a global view of the “vast number of women who have worked in the creation of dark and spooky movies for well over a century, both behind and in front of the camera, and in films both widely known and comparatively obscure.” The author includes an incomplete, as she mentions, but still impressive filmography of full-length movies directed or co-directed by women in an appendix. Also included interspersed throughout book are interviews with Rutanya Alda, Tara Anaïse, Tonjia Atomic, Anna Biller, Axelle Carolyn, Aislinn Clarke, BJ Colangelo, Mattie Do, Julia Ducournau, Jordan Hall, Catherine Hardwicke, Katherine Kean, Karen Lam, Izzy Lee, Barbara Magnolfi, Marsha Mason, Donna McRae, Patrushkha Mierzwa, Hannah Neurotica, Alexandra Paul, Isabel Peppard, Cassandra Peterson, Debbie Rochon, Mia’Kate Russell, Gigi Saul Guerrero, Elizabeth Shepherd, Jen and Sylvia Soska, Brinke Stevens, Barbie Wilde and Silvana Zancolò.

 

Since this is more of a reference book with entries in alphabetical order, readers may not want to read it from cover to cover of course. However, having done so myself, it is wonderful to see how many women, and by no means a complete list of them, have had a direct hand in horror films. I found it particularly interesting that Heller-Nicholas chose to include those in front of the camera. As she points out in her introduction, acting “is a job” and often requires hard work, dedication, and time.  With WiHM, we so often focus on the filmmakers that the actors themselves tend to go unnoticed in their efforts.

 

Alexandra Heller-Nicholas, a film critic from Melbourne, Australia, holds a PhD in Screen Studies from the University of Melbourne and is an Adjunct Professor at Deakin University and a Research Fellow at RMIT University. She has written eight books on cult, horror and exploitation cinema with an emphasis on gender politics. Given the quality of the research and care that went into 1000 Women in Horror, 1895-2018, I will definitely be checking out her other work. I do hope that at some point in the future there will be a Kindle edition released for accessibility.

 

Highly recommended

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker

Editor’s note: 1000 Women in Horror, 1895-2018  is a nominee on the final ballot for the 2020 Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in Nonfiction.