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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Banewreaker by Jacqueline Carey

Cover to Cover #163: Jacqueline Carey / K. Allen Cross

April 25, 2005June 18, 2024
Morevi: The Chronicles of Rafe and Askana

Cover to Cover #38: Tee Morris and Lisa Lee

November 28, 2002June 21, 2024 | 1 Comment
The Ghost Brigades by John Scalzi

Cover to Cover #202: John Scalzi

January 23, 2006July 6, 2024 | 4 Comments
The Draco Tavern by Larry Niven

Cover to Cover #207: Larry Niven

February 27, 2006June 22, 2024 | 7 Comments
The Cat's Pajamas by Ray Bradbury

Cover to Cover #105: Ray Bradbury / Howard V. Hendrix

March 15, 2004June 29, 2024
Infected by Scott Sigler

Cover to Cover #303A: Scott Sigler

March 31, 2008June 9, 2024 | 6 Comments

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes >>

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Book Reviews

Review: “City of Ember” by Jeanne DuPrau

Review: “City of Ember” by Jeanne DuPrau

Darcy Low | May 22, 2008June 13, 2024 | 1 Comment

Have you ever read a book that is SO good, that you can’t wait to read the next one? That’s this book. It’s the best book I have read so far! The City of Ember is far underground. Which I thought, wow this be really cool to read about.

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.

Review: “Roil” by Trent Jamieson

Review: “Roil” by Trent Jamieson

Laith Preston | December 5, 2011July 27, 2024

Trent Jamieson’s Roil, the first book in The Nightbound Land duology, promises… and delivers.

Review: “Green” by Jay Lake

Review: “Green” by Jay Lake

Lora Friedanthal | November 6, 2009June 1, 2024

Jay Lake is best known for his steampunk series of novels, and yet by weird coincidence (for I am a steampunk myself), the first book of his that I’ve read is Green, which is a standalone fantasy. I cannot judge how this novel ranks against those others.

Green seems to me to be very much a blending of two books: Jacqueline Carey’s Kushiel’s Dart and Karen Miller’s Empress.

Review: “Whitechapel Gods” by S. M. Peters

Review: “Whitechapel Gods” by S. M. Peters

Lora Friedanthal | June 7, 2008June 1, 2024 | 2 Comments

Up until now, steampunk has been, for me, an aesthetic. It makes the great heroes of my childhood even cooler. And it makes for computers that are beyond sexy. Something in the synthesis of technology and analog mechanisms strikes just the right chord with me. It’s like the most elegant Rube Goldberg imaginable, with style. And yet, I had never read anything from the genre that inspires these creative works of fabrication fancy.

Until now.

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: “The People of Sparks” by Jeanne DuPrau

Review: “The People of Sparks” by Jeanne DuPrau

Darcy Low | October 15, 2008June 13, 2024

Hi, first I need to say that there are going be spoilers in my review. I can’t help it, there just no way to talk about it and not spoil the first book for you. So if you have not read it yet, I’m just letting you know.

Review: “Black Magic Woman” by Justin Gustainis

Review: “Black Magic Woman” by Justin Gustainis

Summer Brooks | April 18, 2008June 3, 2024

Black Magic Woman is the first in a new series by author Justin Gustainis, “The Quincey Morris Supernatural Investigations”. It’s a wonderful read, and wonderful introduction to a world that’s all too familiar to long-time readers of fantasy and dark fantasy like myself.

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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