Killer Cockroaches

Killer Cockroaches
Author: P. J. Neri
Publisher: Bess Press
Total Pages: 124
Release: 1998-08
Genre: Juvenile Fiction
ISBN: 9781573060455

Can Drew, Corey, and Da Gang stop mutant cockroaches from taking over Hawaai?

Killing Cockroaches

Killing Cockroaches
Author: Tony Morgan
Publisher: B&H Publishing Group
Total Pages: 258
Release: 2009
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 0805447857

Church pastor and popular blogger Morgan offers up 142 delightfully offbeat, always on-target stories and strategies about effective church leadership.

Bats

Bats
Author: William W. Johnstone
Publisher: Lyrical Press
Total Pages: 324
Release: 2016-09-27
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1601835353

Wings of Death They’d flown north from Central and South America, appearing one day in the southern wetlands of the U.S. like ominous ink stains in the twilight sky. With each sunset, more appeared, first hundreds then thousands. Massing into a great black cloud of terror, the vampire bats were beating their wings in time with the panicked heartbeats in the towns below. No one knew how to stop them as they fell onto their prey like dark, deadly shadows. But someone had to find a way. Because somewhere in the night, they had become a threat to more than wild animals and livestock. Somewhere in the night madness took hold as these vampire bats developed a taste for human blood. And the feasting had only just begun.

Cockroaches

Cockroaches
Author: L. Patricia Kite
Publisher: Lerner Publications
Total Pages: 54
Release: 2001-01-01
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780822530466

Describes the cockroach's life cycle, behavior, habitat, and interaction with humans.

Cockroach

Cockroach
Author: Marion Copeland
Publisher: Reaktion Books
Total Pages: 204
Release: 2004-04-04
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 1861894856

The cockroach could not have scuttled along, almost unchanged, for two hundred and fifty million years – some two hundred and forty-nine before man evolved – unless it was doing something right. It would be fascinating as well as instructive to have access to the cockroach’s own record of its life on earth, to know its point of view on evolution and species domination over the millennia. Such chronicles would perhaps radically alter our perceptions of the dinosaur’s span and importance – and that of our own development and significance. We might learn that throughout all these aeons, the dominant life form has been, if not the cockroach itself, then certainly the insect. Attempts to chronicle the cockroach’s intellectual and emotional life have been made only within the last century when a scientist titled his essay on the cockroach "The Intellectual and Emotional World of the Cockroach", and artists as radically different as Franz Kafka and Don Marquis created equally memorable cockroach protagonists. At least since Classical Greece, authors have brought cockroach characters into the foreground to speak for the weak and downtrodden, the outsiders, those forced to survive on the underside of dominant human cultures. Cockroaches have become the subjects of songs (La Cucaracha), have competed in "roachraces" and have even ended up in recipes. In this accessible, sympathetic and often humorous book, Marion Copeland examines the natural history, symbolism and cultural significance of this poorly understood and much-maligned insect.

Monstrous Nature

Monstrous Nature
Author: Robin L. Murray
Publisher: U of Nebraska Press
Total Pages: 269
Release: 2016-10-01
Genre: Performing Arts
ISBN: 0803294921

Godzilla, a traditional natural monster and representation of cinema’s subgenre of natural attack, also provides a cautionary symbol of the dangerous consequences of mistreating the natural world—monstrous nature on the attack. Horror films such as Godzilla invite an exploration of the complexities of a monstrous nature that humanity both creates and embodies. Robin L. Murray and Joseph K. Heumann demonstrate how the horror film and its offshoots can often be understood in relation to a monstrous nature that has evolved either deliberately or by accident and that generates fear in humanity as both character and audience. This connection between fear and the natural world opens up possibilities for ecocritical readings often missing from research on monstrous nature, the environment, and the horror film. Organized in relation to four recurring environmental themes in films that construct nature as a monster—anthropomorphism, human ecology, evolution, and gendered landscapes—the authors apply ecocritical perspectives to reveal the multiple ways nature is constructed as monstrous or in which the natural world itself constructs monsters. This interdisciplinary approach to film studies fuses cultural, theological, and scientific critiques to explore when and why nature becomes monstrous.

Crackroaches

Crackroaches
Author: Gary Lee Vincent
Publisher: Burning Bulb Publishing
Total Pages: 157
Release: 2024-06-01
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

Dive into a gripping tale of scientific experimentation gone awry and the terrifying consequences that follow in Crackroaches! Dr. Annabelle Cole and her assistant, Doyle Sanders, are exploring the mysteries of Agent Orange, a highly addictive variant of crack cocaine. As they push the boundaries of research, they unwittingly unleash a nightmare of mutated cockroaches driven by insatiable hunger and the desire for the very substance that transformed them. In the midst of chaos, park ranger Gary Bentley finds himself thrust into a battle against these monstrous insects and the deadly consequences of their rampage. With law enforcement stretched thin and the source of the drug elusive, Gary must try and save the mountain community he serves, now teetering on the brink of disaster. Get ready to step into a world where science fiction meets horror in a battle for survival against the ultimate predators. Are you ready to confront the terror of the Crackroaches?

The Cockroach Papers

The Cockroach Papers
Author: Richard Schweid
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2015-06-04
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 022626047X

Skittering figures of urban legend—and a ubiquitous reality—cockroaches are nearly as abhorred as they are ancient. Even as our efforts to exterminate them have developed into ever more complex forms of chemical warfare, roaches’ basic design of six legs, two hypersensitive antennae, and one set of voracious mandibles has persisted unchanged for millions of years. But as Richard Schweid shows in The Cockroach Papers, while some species of these evolutionary superstars do indeed plague our kitchens and restaurants, exacerbate our asthma, and carry disease, our belief in their total villainy is ultimately misplaced. Traveling from New York City to Louisiana, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Morocco, Schweid blends stories of his own squirm-inducing roach encounters with meticulous research to spin a tale both humorous and harrowing. As he investigates roaches’ more nefarious interactions with our species—particularly with those of us living at the margins of society—Schweid also explores their astonishing diversity, how they mate, what they’ll eat, and what we’ve written about them (from Kafka and Nelson Algren to archy and mehitabel). Knowledge soon turns into respect, and Schweid looks beyond his own fears to arrive at an uncomfortable truth: We humans are no more peaceful, tidy, or responsible about taking care of the Earth or each other than these tiny creatures that swarm in the dark corners of our minds, homes, and cereal boxes.

Roger Corman

Roger Corman
Author: Beverly Gray
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Total Pages: 318
Release: 2004
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781560255550

A pioneer of independent cinema, Roger Corman is a fascinating study in contrasts. As the original King of the Exploitation Film, he has filled his movies with images of blood-sucking vampires, rampaging biker gangs, vigilante strippers, and abducting aliens, all while producing each of his four-hundred-plus films on a shoestring budget and making a profit on nearly every one. In the process, Corman became the role model for today’s independent filmmaker. This guru with a vision has also demonstrated an uncanny eye for talent, being among the first to recognize and employ the abilities of Jack Nicholson, Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper, Francis Ford Coppola, Martin Scorsese, Jonathan Demme, Joe Dante, Ron Howard, John Sayles, and James Cameron to name but a few. Through interviews with eighty of Corman’s friends and associates and photographs, Beverly Gray takes you behind the cameras and into the heart of Cormanville for a firsthand, insider’s look at the man and the mogul, providing a compelling private and public perspective on this soft-spoken giant of the cinema.

Seeing Red

Seeing Red
Author: David J. Schow
Publisher: Crossroad Press
Total Pages: 349
Release: 2024-01-21
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

Brain-scorching review hyperbole! Pithy critical commentary! Big-name blurb mongering! Hardcore buy-or-die sales pitch hysteria! You'll find none of that in Seeing Red, David J. Schow's very first collection of short stories, back in print for the first time in nearly ten years. It features the World Fantasy Award-winning story, "Red Light," the Twilight Zone Magazine prize-winner "Coming Soon to a Theatre Near You," plus eleven more tales as startling, as disturbing, as provocative and unnerving. Between these covers you'll also find an introduction by best-selling fantasist T.E.D. Klein, and "Crimson Hindsight," a brand-new Afterword written especially for this edition.