"Offers a thoughtful fan of Metal, as well as those outside this base curious about the resonance of the genre across borders and cultures, a place to begin their own attentive scrutiny of a worthy music."
— Spectrum Culture
"A globalist perspective of metal studies. . . . Particularly impressive is the commitment to metal scenes in majority non-white societies. . . . The chapters are all very readable, for the most part dispensing with insider jargon or impenetrably academic language."
— Popular Music
"A hugely diverse collection of topics, taking in Finnish folk metal, female Puerto Rican metal instrumentalists, the influence of eighteenth-century gothic literature and self-instructional guitar methods. This variety is to be commended."
— Metal Music Studies
"Showcases the best and most creative approaches to heavy metal scholarship today. While most essay collections launch from a single starting point or theme, this group of contributions is wide-ranging – a welcome relief. Scholars from diverse fields present unique looks at heavy metal in popular culture including (but not limited to) identity, politics, gender, nostalgia, horror, documentary filmmaking, and using heavy metal to teach freshman composition. . . . Happily this collection offers a fresh, engaging series of analyses that spans disciplines and approaches. . . . The increasing range of interests reflected in Connecting Metal to Culture suggests a bright, multifaceted path for scholars of heavy metal."
— Rock Music Studies