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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

The Blood King by Gail Z. Martin

Cover to Cover #311A: Gail Z. Martin

May 27, 2008June 2, 2024 | 4 Comments
The Rookie by Scott Sigler

Cover to Cover #237: Scott Sigler

October 16, 2006June 22, 2024 | 9 Comments
Crystal Rain by Tobias Buckell

Cover to Cover #206: Tobias S. Buckell

February 20, 2006June 13, 2024 | 4 Comments
Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom by Cory Doctorow

Cover to Cover #47: Cory Doctorow

January 30, 2003June 7, 2024
The Fiction Writer: Get Published, Write Now!

Cover to Cover #396A: Nina Munteanu

February 15, 2010June 17, 2024 | 1 Comment
For More Than Glory

Cover to Cover #85: William C. Dietz / R. A. Salvatore

October 27, 2003June 29, 2024

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Book Reviews

Review: “Demon Angel” by Meljean Brook

Review: “Demon Angel” by Meljean Brook

Jane Litte | February 6, 2007June 16, 2024

If there was ever a time a fantasy reader wanted to dip their toes into the romance waters, it would be this book by debut author Meljean Brook. Don’t let the cover put you off because behind the clinch embrace is a detailed urban fantasy with a good bit of action.

Review: “The Plot to Save Socrates” by Paul Levinson

Review: “The Plot to Save Socrates” by Paul Levinson

David Moldawer | February 20, 2006June 21, 2024 | 2 Comments

Levinson, author of The Silk Code and The Consciousness Plague, among others novels, brings us one of the more peculiar time travel books I’ve read. In it, a group of time travellers brought together by forces unknown—and you never really find out whom—conspire to rescue Socrates from hemlock poisioning at the hands of the Athenian democracy, bringing him to the future for the benefit of all mankind.

Review: “Platinum Pohl: The Collected Best Stories”

Review: “Platinum Pohl: The Collected Best Stories”

David Moldawer | December 12, 2005June 3, 2024

I’d never read Pohl before dipping into Platinum Pohl, but now I find myself eager to expand my Pohl-ian horizons. This is Grand Master science fiction at its finest. Each one of the stories in here is a gem, a well-crafted little machine.

Review: “The Dragon DelaSangre” by Alan F. Troop

Review: “The Dragon DelaSangre” by Alan F. Troop

Joe Murphy | June 12, 2003June 7, 2024 | 4 Comments

Alan F. Troop writes well. His prose has a nice, tight style, and he tells a well constructed, if somewhat convoluted, story. I enjoyed large portions of the book. But the story suffers from two miscalculations that makes the book unfulfilling overall.

Review: “WWW: Wake” by Robert J. Saywer

Review: “WWW: Wake” by Robert J. Saywer

Michael Hickerson | June 17, 2009June 7, 2024

Good science fiction speculates on things that are theoretically possible given some of the conditions and advances of our current level of technology. In many cases, the advances may be years or decades away from becoming reality, but in the case of Robert J. Sawyer’s new novel, “WWW: Wake,” part of his speculated future has become a reality far too quickly.

Review: “Orphanage” by Robert Buettner

Review: “Orphanage” by Robert Buettner

E Terra | November 11, 2004June 10, 2024

Robert Buettner is a great writer. Seriously. Anyone who can keep me not only interested in a military SF book, but also interested enough to read it in less than THREE DAYS is doing something right. You just don’t want to put the book down.

Review: “The First Rule” by Robert Crais

Review: “The First Rule” by Robert Crais

Summer Brooks | July 6, 2010June 1, 2024

I made a careless mistake, sitting on my sofa at around 1:30am… I picked The First Rule off the daunting TBR stack in my living room and began reading, fully intending to read just the first couple chapters, then get in bed.

Somewhere around 6:30am, with the morning sky already bright, and my eyes burning from lack of sleep, I forced myself to stay awake and finish the book. I absolutely refused to put the book down with so few pages left, and pushed my way through to the end.

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.

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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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