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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Promise of the Witch King

Cover to Cover #195: Tracy Hickman / R. A. Salvatore

December 5, 2005June 22, 2024 | 9 Comments
In A Time of Treason by David Keck

Cover to Cover #299A: David Keck

March 3, 2008June 9, 2024 | 2 Comments
Juggler of Worlds

Cover to Cover #332A: Edward M. Lerner

October 21, 2008June 18, 2024 | 3 Comments
Mindscan by Robert J. Sawyer

Cover to Cover #159: Robert J. Sawyer

March 28, 2005June 3, 2024
Infected by Scott Sigler

Cover to Cover #303A: Scott Sigler

March 31, 2008June 9, 2024 | 6 Comments

Cover to Cover #201: Matthew Wayne Selznick

January 15, 2006June 22, 2024 | 9 Comments

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes…

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Book Reviews

Guest Review: “Prisoners Under Glass” by R. Patrick

Guest Review: “Prisoners Under Glass” by R. Patrick

Library Dragon | July 30, 2006June 4, 2024

Young readers who love big, bold action, boisterous high jinks and bizarre images, all mixed up with a bunch of people prone to snappy dialog learning to rely on each other in life-and-death situations, will get a kick out of Prisoners Under Glass.

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: “Gone” by Michael Grant

Review: “Gone” by Michael Grant

Samuel K. Sloan | June 12, 2008May 27, 2024

Grant has successfully written himself a real suspense-filled saga about a group of small city kids placed in extraordinary circumstances and dealing with problems that would cause any well-seasoned and trained adult to go crazy.

Review: “Discount Armageddon” by Seanan McGuire

Review: “Discount Armageddon” by Seanan McGuire

Laith Preston | April 20, 2012June 5, 2024 | 1 Comment

The world is a fairly orderly place, talking mice, gorgons, Chupacabra… these are things of fairy tales, mythology and supermarket tabloids. Not so in Seanan McGuire’s new novel Discount Armageddon, the first book in her new “InCryptid” series.

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: “Red Glove” by Holly Black

Review: “Red Glove” by Holly Black

Web Genii | June 24, 2011June 22, 2024

Red Glove is promoted as a YA novel, although I’d put it more at the 18 year old to adult end of the spectrum than the 13-16 year old range. If your kids are old enough to watch the “Sopranos” or “The Riches” and they like those shows, then this is the right book. Much like those shows, Red Glove contrasts the supposed glamour of a criminal lifestyle with the pain it causes our hero. A younger reader might only see the glamour and magic and miss the misery.

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: “Gaudeamus” by John Barnes

Review: “Gaudeamus” by John Barnes

E Terra | December 19, 2004June 15, 2024

When John Barnes gets a visit from his old buddy and private detective Travis Bismark, he knows two things for sure: Travis needs a ride, and he’ll get at least one new science fiction book out of it.

More Book Reviews…

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Dragon Page Notes

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

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