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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Harshini by Jennifer Fallon

Cover to Cover #180: Jennifer Fallon / Marie Jakober

August 22, 2005June 19, 2024 | 3 Comments
The Orphan's Tales: In the Night Garden

Cover to Cover #253: Catherynne M. Valente

March 12, 2007June 21, 2024 | 7 Comments

Cover to Cover #461: Building Your Audiences

January 30, 2012May 27, 2024 | 5 Comments

Cover to Cover #458: Prepping and Planning A Story

December 12, 2011May 27, 2024 | 1 Comment
Out of the Dark by David Weber

Cover to Cover #429A: David Weber

October 26, 2010June 17, 2024 | 1 Comment
Crawlers by John Shirley

Cover to Cover #90: John Shirley / Bill Pottle

November 30, 2003June 29, 2024

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes…

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Book Reviews

Review: “Reiffen’s Choice” by S. C. Butler

Review: “Reiffen’s Choice” by S. C. Butler

Tim Adamec | December 29, 2006June 6, 2024 | 1 Comment

I really enjoyed the writing style. While the book is targeted for the young adult, descriptions and dialogue do not blatantly point it out. Readers who enjoy writers like Raymond E. Feist and J. K. Rowling will not be disappointed by Reiffen’s Choice.

Review: “Phoenix Tales” by Gregory Bernard Banks

Review: “Phoenix Tales” by Gregory Bernard Banks

Joe Murphy | July 16, 2005July 26, 2024 | 5 Comments

I’ve heard it said that the fear of death so permeates us as a species that all of our endeavors serve as distractions intent on keeping us from thinking about our eventual deaths.

Sometimes, when the clock clicks over at two thirty in the morning, and I can’t sleep, I wish I could come up with more distractions.

Some people apparently decide that rather than distract themselves from thoughts of death, they will turn a brave face into the wind and speculate on the landscape of the undiscovered country.

Review: “Bone Song” by John Meaney

Review: “Bone Song” by John Meaney

Scott Purdy | May 3, 2008June 1, 2024 | 2 Comments

If I had to name the style of Bone Song, I would call it Cyber-Zombie Noir. But lest I give the impression that it’s a book about Zombies let me say that Meaney has created a world with a death based Economy.

Review: “Star Wars: Crosscurrent” by Paul S. Kemp

Review: “Star Wars: Crosscurrent” by Paul S. Kemp

Tia Bowman | January 12, 2011June 25, 2024

Crosscurrent is smartly written, with a timeline just jumpy enough to keep you intrigued, and a cast of characters that make you care what happens to them.

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: “Earthcore” by Scott Sigler

Review: “Earthcore” by Scott Sigler

E Terra | November 17, 2005June 2, 2024 | 2 Comments

I’m not even really sure where to begin with this review. I, along with 6,000 of Sigler’s closest friends, let Scott Sigler pull me around like fish on on an angler’s line for 20 some-odd weeks as he released this fast-paced, bloody mosh-pit of a book in audio form, one chapter at a time.

So yeah, I wanted to kill him on a weekly basis. But back to the story.

Review: “Lord of the Changing Winds” by Rachel Neumeier

Review: “Lord of the Changing Winds” by Rachel Neumeier

Brian Brown | July 8, 2010June 17, 2024

What is refreshing about Lord of the Changing Winds is that it presents a refreshingly new adaptation of griffin lore. When neighboring kingdom Casmantium begins to threaten their desert with ice, the Griffins are forced to flee, taking their desert with them. Griffins are so intimately bound with the element of fire, it has become their own life essence, their spirit.

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.

More Book Reviews…

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