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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Cover to Cover #463: Techniques for Managing the Details

February 20, 2012May 27, 2024 | 3 Comments
In the Night Room

Cover to Cover #137: Welles on Wells / Peter Straub

October 25, 2004June 27, 2024
Go Mutants! by Larry Doyle

Cover to Cover #413A: Larry Doyle

June 22, 2010July 3, 2024 | 11 Comments
UltraViolet by Yvonne Navarro

Cover to Cover #211: Yvonne Navarro

March 27, 2006June 4, 2024 | 9 Comments
7th Son: Descent by J. C. Hutchins

Cover to Cover #383A: J.C. Hutchins, Part 2

November 24, 2009June 17, 2024
Pay the Piper: A Rock-n-Roll Fairy Tale

Cover to Cover #182: Jane Yolen / A. M. Veillon

September 5, 2005June 22, 2024 | 5 Comments

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes…

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Book Reviews

Review: “Ilium” by Dan Simmons

Review: “Ilium” by Dan Simmons

David Moldawer | November 20, 2005June 21, 2024 | 3 Comments

This is an odd book. Simmons envisions a solar system several thousand years in the future. Earth is practically uninhabited—a few hundred thousand “old-style” humans are all that is left of us. So-called “post-humans” left the planet long ago for cities built on asteroids in orbit. The “old-style” humans are each allotted one hundred years of life, at which point they are faxed (quantum teleported) to the rings to live forever with the post-humans. Or so the ordinary humans believe.

Review: “The Dragon DelaSangre” by Alan F. Troop

Review: “The Dragon DelaSangre” by Alan F. Troop

Joe Murphy | June 12, 2003June 7, 2024 | 4 Comments

Alan F. Troop writes well. His prose has a nice, tight style, and he tells a well constructed, if somewhat convoluted, story. I enjoyed large portions of the book. But the story suffers from two miscalculations that makes the book unfulfilling overall.

Review: “Superman: The Never-Ending Battle (Justice League of America)” by Roger Stern

Review: “Superman: The Never-Ending Battle (Justice League of America)” by Roger Stern

David Moldawer | September 20, 2005June 4, 2024

This is another installment in the “Justice League of America” novelizations, this one by Roger Stern. Stern is a long-time DC writer who also did the novelization of the controversial death of Superman arc back in the early 90s, The Death and Life of Superman, a book I actually read on my own out of sheer curiosity.

Review: “Darwin’s Paradox” by Nina Munteanu

Review: “Darwin’s Paradox” by Nina Munteanu

Brian Brown | February 29, 2008June 15, 2024 | 2 Comments

Nina Munteanu weaves a good story that has some large concepts peppered through it. The story does have warts but they are easy enough to gloss over and dig into the main story. There are some nice twists and turns and rabbit holes to follow the tale down. I hope that future books have more about the world, the citizens who inhabit it, and the politics of city states.

Review: “The Making of a Graphic Novel/The Resonator” by Prentis Rollins

Review: “The Making of a Graphic Novel/The Resonator” by Prentis Rollins

David Moldawer | April 30, 2006August 10, 2024

This is one of those ideas that seems so obvious you wonder why it hasn’t been done before. Writer-artist Rollins, who’s worked extensively for DC Comics, splits his book in half.

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: “The Book of Daniel” by Lynn Terelle

Review: “The Book of Daniel” by Lynn Terelle

Joe Murphy | July 29, 2003June 21, 2024

Imagine an entire world populated only by men. The oldest have only recollections of their wives and mothers. The youngest have never even seen a woman except in old movies and photographs. Who would hold all the cards in a world like this? The one who could bring the women back.

Review: “Bitten” by K. L. Nappier

Review: “Bitten” by K. L. Nappier

Lora Friedanthal | September 11, 2007June 14, 2024

I am not familiar with Nappier’s previous work, so the Beast mythos was new to me. And I found myself reading on so that I could understand the rules involved in her take on the werewolf legends. Hunters David and Max had managed, within the first chapter, to bring an “incarnation” of the Beast. Usually, one stops once the werewolf is dead. But not in this universe.

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