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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Cover to Cover #458: Prepping and Planning A Story

December 12, 2011May 27, 2024 | 1 Comment
Bitten to Death by Jennifer Rardin

Cover to Cover #329A: Jennifer Rardin

September 29, 2008June 7, 2024 | 3 Comments
Phoenix Rising: Ministry of Peculiar Occurences

Cover to Cover #452: Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris

May 3, 2011January 15, 2025 | 3 Comments
Bride of the Fat White Vampire

Cover to Cover #128: Andrew Fox / William Koonce

August 23, 2004February 11, 2015
Jack: Secret Histories

Cover to Cover #325A: F. Paul Wilson

September 1, 2008May 31, 2024
Dreamer of Dune: The Biography of Frank Herbert

Cover to Cover #73: Brian Herbert / Robert D. Miles

August 4, 2003June 30, 2024

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Book Reviews

Review: “Hydrogen Steel” by K. A. Bedford

Review: “Hydrogen Steel” by K. A. Bedford

Tim Adamec | February 19, 2007June 3, 2024 | 1 Comment

Hydrogen Steel could have been (cue the cheesy SciFi Echo) “Detectives In Space” but, thankfully, it’s not. The story meanders between a mystery and an espionage tale, nimbly dances on the edge of hard Science Fiction and throws in a heavy philosophical element for good measure.

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: “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: “Eon: Dragoneye Reborn” by Alison Goodman

Review: “Eon: Dragoneye Reborn” by Alison Goodman

Michael Hickerson | February 7, 2009May 30, 2024

“Dragoneye” is the first of a two-part story set in Goodman’s universe. Thankfully, Goodman is able to resolve enough of the storylines to keep readers satisfied and make this a complete novel, while creating a cliffhanger and situation that will leave you wanting to pick up the next installment as soon as possible and find out what happens next.

Review: “Superman: The Never-Ending Battle (Justice League of America)” by Roger Stern

Review: “Superman: The Never-Ending Battle (Justice League of America)” by Roger Stern

David Moldawer | September 20, 2005June 4, 2024

This is another installment in the “Justice League of America” novelizations, this one by Roger Stern. Stern is a long-time DC writer who also did the novelization of the controversial death of Superman arc back in the early 90s, The Death and Life of Superman, a book I actually read on my own out of sheer curiosity.

Review: “S.” by J.J. Abrams and Doug Dorst

Review: “S.” by J.J. Abrams and Doug Dorst

Stephen Carpenter | November 26, 2013June 8, 2024 | 1 Comment

The novel S. is less of a conventional story written using words than it is an experience using the book as an object that mystifies the reader into a multi-layered tale of intrigue, young romance, and mystery. S. is told through the imaginary novel, Ship of Theseus, written by a Kafkaesque V.M. Straka whose real identity is unknown.

Review: “Ready Player One” by Ernest Cline

Review: “Ready Player One” by Ernest Cline

Web Genii | June 8, 2012May 29, 2024

Before I get started with my review of READY, PLAYER ONE, let me state my admiration for the publicity campaign surrounding it. This campaign has generated rapturous reviews all over the blogosphere and multiple author interviews on numerous podcasts. It’s a little intimidating to review a book that has been so widely (and positively) reviewed. For authors, I think it would be useful to study this campaign and see what has made it so successful.

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.

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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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