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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Cover to Cover #465: Catching Up and Moving Forward

May 19, 2014May 27, 2024 | 7 Comments
Sister Alice

Cover to Cover #91: Robert Reed / Michelle M. Welch

December 8, 2003June 29, 2024

Cover to Cover #14: Bruce Holland Rogers

May 16, 2002June 11, 2024
Bubba Ho-Tep by Joe R. Lansdale

Cover to Cover #110: Joe R. Lansdale / Don Coscarelli

April 19, 2004June 11, 2024
Tongues of Serpents by Naomi Novik

Cover to Cover #428A: Naomi Novik

October 19, 2010June 17, 2024 | 1 Comment

Cover to Cover #25: David Taylor

August 22, 2002May 29, 2024

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes…

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Book Reviews

Review: “The Goddess Test” by Aimée Carter

Review: “The Goddess Test” by Aimée Carter

Web Genii | July 29, 2011June 7, 2024

What I didn’t expect was to be reaching for a tissue in the first twenty pages. Ms. Carter nicely sidesteps the whole unequal romance trope by placing the emotional center of the novel in the relationship between our heroine Kate and her mother Diana. Kate’s frantic grief over her mother’s looming death drives the plot and gives more weight to the story than a YA romance would normally command.

Review: “The Enterprise of Death” by Jesse Bullington

Review: “The Enterprise of Death” by Jesse Bullington

Web Genii | July 15, 2011June 6, 2024

The Enterprise of Death really broke my normal reading rules. You see, normally if I stop reading a book that’s it — Game Over. I just don’t pick books back up and continue them. I did put The Enterprise of Death down several times, because it was just too intense for me. And, at one point I stopped reading it for a couple of weeks while I went on to other books

But I kept coming back to The Enterprise of Death, because I just had to find out what happened to the characters.

Review: “Small Favor” by Jim Butcher

Review: “Small Favor” by Jim Butcher

Brian Brown | June 27, 2008June 1, 2024 | 1 Comment

Small Favor is a great read and I think that the Dresden Files books are a great introduction to fantasy/sci-fi for someone who doesn’t normally read such genres. It’s a P.I. mystery with magic with strong characters, an over arching plots as well as smaller story arcs that finish up in single book… mostly.

Review: “Five Seasons of Angel”

Review: “Five Seasons of Angel”

Summer Brooks | November 17, 2004May 31, 2024

You know that a pop culture staple has gone far beyond the normal range of fandom and reached saturation when serious academic studies relating to the psychology, philosophy, and morality of show and of its characters are being published.

To my knowledge, only Buffy the Vampire Slayer (with two academic conferences dedicated to it so far) and Godzilla fall into that category, but Buffy’s spinoff, Angel, should be right beside them.

Review: “A Companion to Wolves” by Sarah Monette and Elizabeth Bear

Review: “A Companion to Wolves” by Sarah Monette and Elizabeth Bear

Lora Friedanthal | March 21, 2008July 27, 2024

Now this was a surprise. Here is one of those rare books not produced as a precursor to a series.

This is not to say that the land Monette and Bear have created couldn’t support multiple visits. It is merely to say that they have constructed a tale that is complete and unconcerned with possibilities and marketing strategies beyond its own ken.

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: “The Magicians and Mrs. Quent” by Galen Beckett

Review: “The Magicians and Mrs. Quent” by Galen Beckett

Lora Friedanthal | February 5, 2009June 19, 2024

I began reading this book with a question of my own: would infusing magic into a novel of manners produce a book that I would enjoy reading? Because in all honesty, although I have read Pride and Prejudice and Wuthering Heights, I didn’t enjoy either.

Review: “Far-Seer” by Robert J. Sawyer

Review: “Far-Seer” by Robert J. Sawyer

Joe Murphy | May 18, 2004June 6, 2024

Robert J. Sawyer’s Far-Seer tells the story of Afsan, an apprentice astrologer who takes his first pilgrimage: a long and dangerous ocean voyage to find the face of god. Hungry and thirsty for knowledge, Afsan is blessed on this voyage. The ship’s captain owns a far-seer; a new invention made of lenses and tubes that enables its user to see far off objects in great detail.

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