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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Counterfeit Kings

Cover to Cover #119: Robert Newcomb / Adam Connell

June 21, 2004June 3, 2024
Vicious Circle by Mike Carey

Cover to Cover #319A: Mike Carey

July 21, 2008June 8, 2024 | 1 Comment
Keeper's Child

Cover to Cover #301A: Leslie Davis

March 17, 2008June 6, 2024 | 5 Comments
The Kensei: A Lawsom Vampire Novel

Cover to Cover #445: Jon F. Merz

March 7, 2011May 31, 2024 | 2 Comments
From the Notebooks of Dr. Brain

Cover to Cover #291A: Minister Faust

December 24, 2007June 22, 2024 | 4 Comments
The Faery Reel

Cover to Cover #156: Ellen Datlow / Craig Spector

March 7, 2005June 23, 2024

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes…

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Book Reviews

Review: “Light” by M. John Harrison

Review: “Light” by M. John Harrison

David Moldawer | April 6, 2006June 5, 2024

What makes Light so special, and so very much worth your attention, is that no matter how “far out” Harrison takes things—very far out indeed, if you’re wondering—he remains primarily concerned with human stories, human dilemmas. There are three main characters in this book who (almost) never interact in the course of the story, though their lives are all intertwined and eventually come together.

Review: “Dust” by Joan Frances Turner

Review: “Dust” by Joan Frances Turner

Tia Bowman | November 28, 2010June 8, 2024

In Dust we get to experience zombie matters from the eyes of the source, as it were, and what a strange experience it is. The undead are not romanticized in this novel, so you might not want to eat before or during your reading session. Nausea may ensue.

Review: “Fire Study” by Maria V. Snyder

Review: “Fire Study” by Maria V. Snyder

Lora Friedanthal | June 18, 2008June 8, 2024

Oh, Yelena. You crazy, headstrong, impulsive, bleeding heart, acrobatic trickster, I have missed you. I hope Ms. Synder takes it as a compliment that I have read each of her books in no more than two days. For all the work that goes into them, part of me feels that I should somehow be savoring them more. But if I did, then I wouldn’t find out what happens next as quickly as I need to.

Review: “Calculating God” by Robert J. Sawyer

Review: “Calculating God” by Robert J. Sawyer

Joe Murphy | June 13, 2003May 31, 2024

If you read science fiction, you have to read Robert J. Sawyer. That’s all there is to it.

Calculating God explores such mundane questions as “Was the universe designed by an intelligent creator?” “Is there a God?” “Does he influence the affairs of man?” “Why is there life in the universe?” Sawyer’s answers are the most imaginative you will ever read.

Review: “Freedom (TM)” by Daniel Suarez

Review: “Freedom (TM)” by Daniel Suarez

Michael Hickerson | March 9, 2010July 1, 2024 | 1 Comment

At its core, “Freedom (TM)” is a techno-thriller with elements of cyberpunk thrown in for fun.  Suarez keeps the story moving at a good clip, creating some nicely done action sequences that could translate well to the big-screen whenever the movie version of the novels is made.  But he also balances that out with sections examining the implications of technology and an over reliance on it.

Review: “The Darkest Part of the Woods” by Ramsey Campbell

Review: “The Darkest Part of the Woods” by Ramsey Campbell

Joe Murphy | November 16, 2003June 7, 2024

Have you ever had a sore spot like an aching tooth, an ingrown toenail, or a spot on your arm where you just got a shot? You know, some place that kisses you with a sharp pain if you don’t leave well enough alone? What do you do? You touch it, squeeze it, push on it. There you go, a grown-up, intelligent human being with a toothache, and you’ll actually bite down hard. When you can’t take the pain anymore you let up and wonder at your stupidity. Then, you go and do the same thing again half an hour later.

The Darkest Part of the Woods, by Ramsey Campbell, was a toothache I wouldn’t stop biting down on. I don’t know how many times I set the book down after an hour of reading, completely bored, totally uninterested… just to pick up the book again the next day.

Review: “Nexus” by Ramez Naam

Review: “Nexus” by Ramez Naam

Laith Preston | January 30, 2013May 31, 2024 | 1 Comment

Nexus is a thriller for the post-human age, Ramez Naam does a phenomenal job of taking modern cutting edge science and building a realistic world of the near future. In Nexus, Naam asks the question, “what if?”.

Review: “Red Glove” by Holly Black

Review: “Red Glove” by Holly Black

Web Genii | June 24, 2011June 22, 2024

Red Glove is promoted as a YA novel, although I’d put it more at the 18 year old to adult end of the spectrum than the 13-16 year old range. If your kids are old enough to watch the “Sopranos” or “The Riches” and they like those shows, then this is the right book. Much like those shows, Red Glove contrasts the supposed glamour of a criminal lifestyle with the pain it causes our hero. A younger reader might only see the glamour and magic and miss the misery.

More Book Reviews…

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

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