• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Dragon Page "Cover to Cover" logo

The Dragon Page "Cover to Cover"

Conversations with Authors of Science Fiction and Fantasy

  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • News
  • Cover to Cover
  • A Different Point of View

“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Chainfire by Terry Goodkind

Cover to Cover #153: Terry Goodkind / c. c. dust

February 14, 2005June 23, 2024
November Mourns by Tom Piccirilli

Cover to Cover #175: Wil McCarthy / Tom Piccirilli

July 18, 2005June 23, 2024 | 3 Comments

Cover to Cover #68: Tamara Thorne / Lee Nelson

June 30, 2003August 25, 2024
Bitten by K. L. Nappier

Cover to Cover #278A: K. L. Nappier

September 10, 2007June 19, 2024 | 2 Comments
Those Who Fight Monsters

Cover to Cover #447: Justin Gustainis

March 22, 2011January 15, 2025 | 2 Comments
The Office of Shadow by Matthew Sturges

Cover to Cover #410A: Lou Anders

May 31, 2010August 24, 2024 | 2 Comments

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes >>

NK Jemisin
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

Book Reviews

Review: “Night Train to Rigel” by Timothy Zahn

Review: “Night Train to Rigel” by Timothy Zahn

David Moldawer | January 21, 2006June 24, 2024

Timothy Zahn’s a prolific writer with many succesful books both in his own and in other people’s universes.

What’s more, his name makes him eminently suited to be a bad guy in a Star Wars movie himself.

Darth Zahn’s latest book, Night Train to Rigel, delivers why-didn’t-I-think-of-that clever ideas and a zippy plotline that kept me flipping paper to the end.

Review: “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies”

Review: “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies”

Tia Bowman | May 9, 2010June 16, 2024

Let me start off by admitting that I love both Zombies and Regency novels. So, naturally, when I saw a zombified portrait of Jane Austen on the cover of a book, I was intrigued. Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is a parody (or as the back cover describes it, “an expanded edition”) of Jane Austin’s classic regency novel Pride and Prejudice.

Review: “7th Son” by J.C. Hutchins

David Moldawer | March 7, 2006August 9, 2023 | 1 Comment

Attention all you Earth-crack junkies out there. J. C. Hutchins’s 7th Son podcast novel is well worth checking out. It’s a taut, tense scifi thriller that’s got me hooked after only a few episodes.

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: “Star Wars: Crosscurrent” by Paul S. Kemp

Review: “Star Wars: Crosscurrent” by Paul S. Kemp

Tia Bowman | January 12, 2011June 25, 2024

Crosscurrent is smartly written, with a timeline just jumpy enough to keep you intrigued, and a cast of characters that make you care what happens to them.

Review: “The Mirador” by Sarah Monette

Review: “The Mirador” by Sarah Monette

Lora Friedanthal | September 16, 2007June 25, 2024

The single most impressive aspect of Sarah Monette’s writing is her strong sense of voice. The stories are told in first-person with the perspective alternating between Felix and Mildmay throughout the chapters.

Review: “No Dominion” by Charlie Huston

Review: “No Dominion” by Charlie Huston

Tim Adamec | January 4, 2007June 1, 2024 | 4 Comments

The book is marvelously written and very heavy on dialogue and vivid, yet dark, descriptions. Twists and turns abound, unfolding the story at a steady pace. It is also written as a first-person, present tense story, a style that I usually find jarring and unbelievable.

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.

More Book Reviews >>

Footer

Dragon Page Notes

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

Thank you all for your opinions, conversations, contributions and support over the years.

Slice of SciFi Patreon

© 2002–2026 The Dragon Page · Part of the Slice of SciFi Universe

  • Blog
  • About “Cover to Cover”
  • Contact The Dragon Page