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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Jack: Secret Circles

Cover to Cover #399A: F. Paul Wilson

March 9, 2010May 31, 2024 | 2 Comments
7th Son Trilogy

Cover to Cover #268: JC Hutchins

June 25, 2007June 15, 2024 | 6 Comments
Old Man's War by John Scalzi

Cover to Cover #142: John Scalzi / Alma Alexander

November 29, 2004June 15, 2024
Morevi: The Chronicles of Rafe and Askana

Cover to Cover #38: Tee Morris and Lisa Lee

November 28, 2002June 21, 2024 | 1 Comment
V: The Second Generation

Cover to Cover #302A: Kenneth Johnson

March 24, 2008August 25, 2024 | 4 Comments
The Devil You Know by Mike Carey

Cover to Cover #271: Mike Carey / Lynda Williams

July 16, 2007June 8, 2024 | 4 Comments

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Book Reviews

Review: “The Battle for Azeroth: Adventure, Alliance and Addiction”

Review: “The Battle for Azeroth: Adventure, Alliance and Addiction”

Tim Adamec | December 17, 2006June 21, 2024

Touted as a book of “Insights into the World of Warcraft“, The Battle for Azeroth: Adventure, Alliance and Addiction is more of a class guide and compendium of essays about the different aspects of Blizzard Entertainment’s smash hit game. Players and non-playing family and friends will likely find something of interest in this book.

Review: “SOMETIMES THE MAGIC WORKS: Lessons from a Writing Life” by Terry Brooks

Review: “SOMETIMES THE MAGIC WORKS: Lessons from a Writing Life” by Terry Brooks

Tee Morris | December 29, 2003June 17, 2024

Take a sneak peek into the imagination of an amazing writer…and a good guy to boot. Sometimes The Magic Works is a book for everyone who either loves to write, loves to read, or loves to dream.

Review: “The Mirador” by Sarah Monette

Review: “The Mirador” by Sarah Monette

Lora Friedanthal | September 16, 2007June 25, 2024

The single most impressive aspect of Sarah Monette’s writing is her strong sense of voice. The stories are told in first-person with the perspective alternating between Felix and Mildmay throughout the chapters.

Review: “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” by J. K. Rowling

Review: “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix” by J. K. Rowling

Joe Murphy | June 23, 2003June 6, 2024

A million people pre-ordered Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. I guess that makes me one in a million! (Thank you, I’ll be here all week.)

Honestly, though, you can’t imagine how I felt when I opened my door mid-Saturday morning, and found the box from Amazon.com sitting there. I’m a huge Harry Potter fan. For the next two days, I didn’t turn on the TV, didn’t shave, barely bathed, and left the house only once or twice to get a couple of snacks (and didn’t bother to brush, my teeth look nasty).

Review: “The Boys Are Back In Town” by Christopher Golden

Review: “The Boys Are Back In Town” by Christopher Golden

Joe Murphy | April 7, 2004June 5, 2024

Many people who read and write science fiction believe that through the last few decades science fiction has actually prepared society for future technological advances. The idea, some say, is that in science fiction all the pitfalls, moral uncertainties, and roads best not traveled can be discovered and worked out in the pages of entertaining fiction, rather than bitter experience.

So why won’t this generation learn? If science fiction has taught us one thing, it’s that if you have the ability to go into the past in order to change events and make the world a better place… don’t do it! You’re just gonna fuck it up.

Review: “Green” by Jay Lake

Review: “Green” by Jay Lake

Lora Friedanthal | November 6, 2009June 1, 2024

Jay Lake is best known for his steampunk series of novels, and yet by weird coincidence (for I am a steampunk myself), the first book of his that I’ve read is Green, which is a standalone fantasy. I cannot judge how this novel ranks against those others.

Green seems to me to be very much a blending of two books: Jacqueline Carey’s Kushiel’s Dart and Karen Miller’s Empress.

Review: “The Prestige” by Christopher Priest

Review: “The Prestige” by Christopher Priest

David Moldawer | January 3, 2006June 9, 2024

This is an odd, hard to define, impossible to put down book, first published in 1995, but out in a new paperback edition. The reason I’m bringing it to your attention is primarily due to news of an upcoming film: Christopher Nolan, director of Batman Begins and one of my personal favorites, Memento, will begin shooting an adaptation of The Prestige this month.

Review: “Crater County” by Jonathan Miller

Review: “Crater County” by Jonathan Miller

Joe Murphy | June 20, 2005May 31, 2024

So there I am at Ice Escape, and a young man starts chatting me up about his book, Crater County: A Legal Thriller of New Mexico. It’s a slightly supernatural legal thriller, he says. And I says, “A slightly supernatural legal thriller? I don’t think I’ve ever read something like that.” And he says, “How’d you like to review the book?” I says, “Sure, why not?”

We said a lot.

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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.

Thank you all for your opinions, conversations, contributions and support over the years.

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