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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Nightmare by Steven Harper Piziks

Cover to Cover #65: Steven Harper Piziks

June 12, 2003July 1, 2024
Blackout by Connie Willis

Cover to Cover #398A: Connie Willis

March 1, 2010June 17, 2024
Life by Gwyneth Jones

Cover to Cover #141: Gwyneth Jones / Vijaya Schartz

November 22, 2004June 27, 2024
Banewreaker by Jacqueline Carey

Cover to Cover #163: Jacqueline Carey / K. Allen Cross

April 25, 2005June 18, 2024

Cover to Cover #70: Boris Vallejo, Julie Bell / L. Marie Wood

July 15, 2003June 30, 2024

The Dragon Page #6

March 18, 2002May 30, 2024

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes…

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Book Reviews

Review: “Happily Ever After” edited by John Klima

Review: “Happily Ever After” edited by John Klima

Tia Bowman | July 27, 2011June 6, 2024

Happily Ever After is an anthology edited by John Klima, in which each story was in some way inspired by a fairy tale. I am an absolute sucker for any kind of fairy tale retelling, but good ones are few and can be difficult to find. So this particular anthology was right up my alley. Plus any editor who was inspired to make an anthology by Neil Gaiman’s “The Troll Bridge” is guaranteed to have fantastic taste in stories.

Review: “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” by J. K. Rowling

Review: “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” by J. K. Rowling

Joe Murphy | June 23, 2003June 6, 2024

A million people pre-ordered Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. I guess that makes me one in a million! (Thank you, I’ll be here all week.)

Honestly, though, you can’t imagine how I felt when I opened my door mid-Saturday morning, and found the box from Amazon.com sitting there. I’m a huge Harry Potter fan. For the next two days, I didn’t turn on the TV, didn’t shave, barely bathed, and left the house only once or twice to get a couple of snacks (and didn’t bother to brush, my teeth look nasty).

Review: “Steampunk!” edited by Kelly Link and Gavin J. Grant

Review: “Steampunk!” edited by Kelly Link and Gavin J. Grant

Web Genii | August 31, 2011June 7, 2024

I do enjoy a good short story anthology and Steampunk! An Anthology of Fantastically Rich and Strange Stories really fits the bill. It offers 14 terrific stories all in the steampunk genre (although some of them are pretty loosely connected — I’m looking at you Garth Nix!). And the quality of the stories are uniformly good.

Review: “A Young Man Without Magic” by Lawrence Watt-Evans

Review: “A Young Man Without Magic” by Lawrence Watt-Evans

Tia Bowman | August 7, 2010June 14, 2024

A Young Man Without Magic is very easy to read. While some events seem like they were shuffled around to fit the outline instead of being part of a natural progression, everything works. Every time I found myself starting to get the slightest bit bored with what was happening, something exciting broke the page and I was hooked again.

Review: “Killing the Rabbit” by Alison Goodman

Review: “Killing the Rabbit” by Alison Goodman

Debbie Walker | December 21, 2007June 1, 2024

This book is based in Australia yet blends in a bit of Japanese and Chinese culture. What doesn’t make sense is this South African Pharmaceutical Company is only killing Australian women with this trait and there is no mention of any other women in any other country. Resorting to the murder of those seven women and the other “loose ends” seems a bit drastic without taking into consideration the possibility of hundreds of women worldwide who might have the same genetic mutation.

Review: The Piaculum

Joe Murphy | July 17, 2004March 20, 2024

Just between you and me, I thought the life of a book reviewer would have more glamour to it, you know? A little cash, a little flash, a little redheaded something on my arm once in a while.

Nope. The life of a book reviewer sucks. No chicks. No cool cars. Have to dig around in the couch cushions for laundry money.

But sometimes I come across a book that makes me smile.

Review: “Heart’s Blood” by Juliet Marillier

Review: “Heart’s Blood” by Juliet Marillier

Web Genii | August 5, 2011June 21, 2024

In Heart’s Blood Ms. Marillier has created believable characters, both living and dead who grow and change through the book. Far from being a knock-off, the story and style stand out nicely on their own. I’m glad to have had the opportunity to discover her work.

Guest Review: “Hell’s Aquarium” by Steve Alten

Guest Review: “Hell’s Aquarium” by Steve Alten

Sandra Welch | October 9, 2009June 20, 2024

OK a few weeks ago, there was a review of Steve Alten’s Hell’s Aquarium. I thought it wasn’t a very good review, so I decided to send in my own, since I read Hell’s Aquarium and liked it a lot.

More Book Reviews…

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Dragon Page Notes

The Dragon Page closed in December 2014. The interview transcripts of the “Cover to Cover” archives can be found here.

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