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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Cover to Cover #55: Ann Tonsor Zeddies / Justin Hinks

March 27, 2003August 25, 2024
In the Courts of the Sun

Cover to Cover #351A: Brian D’Amato

March 9, 2009August 24, 2024 | 10 Comments
Turn Coat

Cover to Cover #354A: Jim Butcher

March 30, 2009May 30, 2024 | 3 Comments
Counterfeit Kings

Cover to Cover #119: Robert Newcomb / Adam Connell

June 21, 2004June 3, 2024
Darkwitch Rising

Cover to Cover #184: Sara Douglass / Maureen F. McHugh

September 19, 2005June 22, 2024 | 4 Comments
sleeping where i fall by Peter Coyote

Cover to Cover #43: Peter Coyote

January 2, 2003July 2, 2024 | 1 Comment

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes >>

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Book Reviews

Review: “The Last Dragon” by Jane Yolen & Rebecca Guay

Review: “The Last Dragon” by Jane Yolen & Rebecca Guay

Laith Preston | December 1, 2011June 9, 2024 | 3 Comments

Wow, I really don’t know where to start with this review. Do I begin with the beautiful art of Rebecca Guay, or wax poetic on the enthralling story crafted by Jane Yolen?

Review: “The Dark Path” by Walter H. Hunt

Review: “The Dark Path” by Walter H. Hunt

Tee Morris | December 29, 2004June 1, 2024

Reviewing books, especially when you’re trying to write your own, makes you a bit self-conscious. When you’re asked for an opinion, you have to approach each title as a reader who is looking for a good escape. That self-conscious feeling only gets worse when I review works written by people I know. I want to give an honest opinion–but if I don’t like it, the friendship is irrevocably marred.

Review: “Counting Heads” by David Marusek

Review: “Counting Heads” by David Marusek

David Moldawer | November 4, 2005June 9, 2024

Marusek has envisioned his world so clearly and carefully that the technical details feel like afterthoughts. References are made subtly and in passing, the way any of us would refer to a ubiquitous convenience like a cellphone or digital camera, and it takes you many pages to get a full glimpse of how this future society truly differs from our own, while remaining completely human and recognizable.

Review: Bloom County: The Complete Library, Vol 1

Review: Bloom County: The Complete Library, Vol 1

Darcy Low | July 28, 2010July 27, 2024 | 5 Comments

The book has comic strips from Mr Breathed very first comics that he did in his college paper, up to 1982. His first drawings were funny, but doesn’t look at all like they do later on. But you can still see his humor and a few of his characters that he stuck with.

Review: “Empire State” by Adam Christopher

Review: “Empire State” by Adam Christopher

Laith Preston | December 22, 2011June 2, 2024 | 2 Comments

Rocket powered superheros, prohibition era bootleggers, private eyes, mysterious men in masks; and more twists and turns than you can imagine. Welcome to Adam Christopher’s Empire State, a Superhero-Noir Science Fiction story set in a dark distorted reflection of New York City of the ’30s.

Review: “Billibub Baddings and the Case of the Singing Sword”

Review: “Billibub Baddings and the Case of the Singing Sword”

Joe Murphy | October 3, 2004June 19, 2024

Do you hear that sound? That is the sound of a thousand Sacred Cows of Fantasy being tipped in the night.

Let me share a piece of wisdom I’ve picked up being the reviewer for the Dragon Page. You simply cannot go wrong reading anything Tee Morris writes. You won’t find a better blend of action, humor, suspense, and romance anywhere else.

Review: “Mercury Rises” by Robert Kroese

Review: “Mercury Rises” by Robert Kroese

Tia Bowman | November 25, 2011July 27, 2024

Mercury Rises is, above all things, a humorous book. It made me laugh, snicker, giggle, and snort (an embarrassing but satisfying thing to happen in the middle of a crowded room).

Review: “Alien Contact”, edited by Marty Halpern

Review: “Alien Contact”, edited by Marty Halpern

Laith Preston | March 1, 2012June 4, 2024 | 4 Comments

I’m always on the lookout for good reading and new authors to follow. Alien Contact is something of a veritable who’s who of the current genre greats, with some names I’m not as familiar with in the mix as well.

With twenty-six short stories telling tales of man meeting with other intelligences, Marty Halpern has pulled together an anthology filled with hours of enjoyable reading.

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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