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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Cover to Cover #215: Greg Van Eekhout

April 24, 2006June 26, 2024 | 9 Comments
Banewreaker by Jacqueline Carey

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

April 25, 2005June 18, 2024
I Am Not A Serial Killer by Dan Wells

Cover to Cover #411A: Dan Wells

June 8, 2010June 17, 2024 | 5 Comments
In the Night Room

Cover to Cover #137: Welles on Wells / Peter Straub

October 25, 2004June 27, 2024
Go Mutants! by Larry Doyle

Cover to Cover #413A: Larry Doyle

June 22, 2010July 3, 2024 | 11 Comments
Ordermaster by L. E. Modesitt, Jr

Cover to Cover #143: L. E. Modesitt, Jr / Michael Pederson

December 7, 2004June 11, 2024

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes…

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Book Reviews

Review: “Inkspell” by Cornelia Funke

Review: “Inkspell” by Cornelia Funke

Darcy Low | February 16, 2008July 4, 2024 | 2 Comments

The book is filled with drawing from the person that wrote the book!! Cornella Funke and really helps you to picture all the people in it. There is also two things in this book that wasn’t in the first one, she put in a hand drawn map!! And there is a dictionary, and a place that tells all about the characters. So if you didn’t read the first book, that’s cool. You can read this and you will be all caught up!

Review: “The Name of the Wind” by Patrick Rothfuss

Review: “The Name of the Wind” by Patrick Rothfuss

Brian Brown | March 6, 2007June 3, 2024 | 12 Comments

Have you ever picked up a book and thought that there was NO WAY it could be as good as the press blurbs on the cover? Have you every believed those blurbs only to be told a complete lie or at the very least, a partial truth?

This is a book that actually lives up to it’s positive buzz and blurbs. Believe EVERYTHING good you hear about it because it’s true.

Review: “Alien Contact”, edited by Marty Halpern

Review: “Alien Contact”, edited by Marty Halpern

Laith Preston | March 1, 2012June 4, 2024 | 4 Comments

I’m always on the lookout for good reading and new authors to follow. Alien Contact is something of a veritable who’s who of the current genre greats, with some names I’m not as familiar with in the mix as well.

With twenty-six short stories telling tales of man meeting with other intelligences, Marty Halpern has pulled together an anthology filled with hours of enjoyable reading.

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.

Review: “The Hades Project” by Justin Gustainis

Review: “The Hades Project” by Justin Gustainis

Joe Murphy | October 2, 2003June 4, 2024

Readers will find The Hades Project, by Justin Gustainis, a tight and exciting read. He has created a wonderfully over the top villain, and has added a supporting cast to match it.

However, this is a debut novel, and it shows in the writing.

Review: “Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith” by Matthew Stover

Review: “Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith” by Matthew Stover

Summer Brooks | April 14, 2005June 3, 2024

The opening of the final chapter of the Star Wars Saga begins on a fast-paced note, and rarely slows down until the very end. All of us old-time Star Wars fans know exactly how things turn out, but what we’ve never known was how events progressed in that direction; until Episode II, we never knew just how much of the bigger picture was manipulated by Darth Sidious.

In this story, we learn how much has been manipulated, how long the pieces have been in play, and how they all come together in the end.

Review: “Finding the Way and Other Tales of Valdemar”

Review: “Finding the Way and Other Tales of Valdemar”

Web Genii | December 13, 2010June 7, 2024

Mercedes Lackey’s Valdemar books are the reader’s equivalent of coming home after a long day; putting on your pj’s and eating cereal for dinner. It’s simple and sometimes intensely comforting. As a reader, the structure of a Valdemar book is highly predictable and that is part of their appeal.

So, this book of short stories is a great way to shake things up.

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.

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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