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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

7th Son Trilogy

Cover to Cover #217: J. C. Hutchins

May 8, 2006June 22, 2024 | 5 Comments
Dragons of a Vanished Moon: Dragonlance: The War of Souls Book 3

Cover to Cover #20: Tracy Hickman

July 11, 2002July 3, 2024

Cover to Cover #64: Richard Purtill / Lynn Terelle

May 29, 2003August 25, 2024
Life by Gwyneth Jones

Cover to Cover #141: Gwyneth Jones / Vijaya Schartz

November 22, 2004June 27, 2024
Shriek by Jeff VanderMeer

Cover to Cover #210: Jeff VanderMeer

March 20, 2006June 8, 2024 | 3 Comments
The Other Lands by David Anthony Durham

Cover to Cover #376A: David Anthony Durham

October 5, 2009June 6, 2024 | 1 Comment

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Book Reviews

Review: “Woken Furies” by Richard K. Morgan

Review: “Woken Furies” by Richard K. Morgan

David Moldawer | June 21, 2006June 9, 2024 | 1 Comment

Waiting to meet a friend for lunch the other day, I stood outside a restaurant in Manhattan’s TriBeCa with my face buried in Woken Furies, the latest book from Richard K. Morgan. The restaurant manager spotted me reading and approached me eagerly: “Is that the new Takeshi Kovacs?” The funny part is, this was the second time I’d been approached by a rabid fan while reading one of Morgan’s books.

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: “Black Blade Blues” by J. A. Pitts

Review: “Black Blade Blues” by J. A. Pitts

Tia Bowman | August 13, 2010June 4, 2024

The thing I love about urban fantasy is that it doesn’t take place in some pretend land where everyone can shoot lightning from their eyeballs – it’s here, where we live. There’s always the little extra bit of excitement that it could happen when the story is set in a town you’ve been to, maybe even lived in.

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: “Chance Fortune and the Outlaws” by Shane Berryhill

Review: “Chance Fortune and the Outlaws” by Shane Berryhill

Brian Brown | May 2, 2007August 10, 2024

Chance Fortune and the Outlaws is a fun story that pays homage to classic comic books and throws in young people having to deal with more than just learning to use their powers. If you enjoy a good read along the lines of Mr. Potter and his friends, comic book superheroes or just want something different to entice younger readers I would recommend this book.

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: “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: “The Da Vinci Code” by Dan Brown

Review: “The Da Vinci Code” by Dan Brown

Tee Morris | March 22, 2004June 19, 2024

If Alfred Hitchcock produced and directed the television show 24, the end result would be The Da Vinci Code, a strap-yourself-in-and-hold-on-for-dear-life of a read that lives up to the hype and does not disappoint.

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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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