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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Serenity Found

Cover to Cover #286B: Jane Espenson

November 15, 2007June 4, 2024 | 1 Comment
The Fiction Writer: Get Published, Write Now!

Cover to Cover #396A: Nina Munteanu

February 15, 2010June 17, 2024 | 1 Comment

Cover to Cover #70: Boris Vallejo, Julie Bell / L. Marie Wood

July 15, 2003June 30, 2024
Death's Daughter by Amber Benson

Cover to Cover #350A: Amber Benson

March 3, 2009June 9, 2024 | 5 Comments

Cover to Cover #464: Understanding Character Growth

March 5, 2012May 27, 2024 | 5 Comments
The Darkness That Comes Before

Cover to Cover #157: R. Scott Bakker

March 14, 2005June 23, 2024 | 1 Comment

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Book Reviews

Review: “The Strain” by Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan

Review: “The Strain” by Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan

Michael Hickerson | June 17, 2009June 24, 2024

Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan originally conceived “The Strain” as a serialized television series for the Fox network. After Fox execs balked at the original vision, insisting the writers inject more humor into the storyline of a modern-day vampire apocolypse, del Toro and Hogan decided to take their toys and go home. Rather than create a movie version of this modern day retelling of “Dracula,” the two decided to go literary.

Review: “Eon: Dragoneye Reborn” by Alison Goodman

Review: “Eon: Dragoneye Reborn” by Alison Goodman

Michael Hickerson | February 7, 2009May 30, 2024

“Dragoneye” is the first of a two-part story set in Goodman’s universe. Thankfully, Goodman is able to resolve enough of the storylines to keep readers satisfied and make this a complete novel, while creating a cliffhanger and situation that will leave you wanting to pick up the next installment as soon as possible and find out what happens next.

Review: “Pandemic” by Scott Sigler

Review: “Pandemic” by Scott Sigler

Michael Hickerson | December 30, 2013June 9, 2024

Podcast novelist (and self-proclaimed future dark overlord) Scott Sigler burst onto the horror scene a couple of years ago Infected. If you’ve read (or listened to) Sigler’s original novel, I need only say two words to make you shudder involuntarily — chicken scissors.

Review: “Troubled Waters” by Sharon Shinn

Review: “Troubled Waters” by Sharon Shinn

Web Genii | January 14, 2011June 3, 2024

I plunged right into Troubled Waters and when I finished it, I started all over again and re-read it once more. I often re-read a book for reviews, but seldom back to back. Troubled Waters was just that good.

Sharon Shinn’s books are  always very enjoyable, readable romantic fantasies. But I think that Troubled Waters marks a new development for her.

Review: “The Spiderwick Chronicles, Book 1: The Field Guide”

Review: “The Spiderwick Chronicles, Book 1: The Field Guide”

Darcy Low | April 13, 2008June 24, 2024

My best friend Ashley got this book out of our school library and said I soooooooo had to read it. I took it and looked at it and it was like the littlest book I ever seen! But we like same books so I took it home and wow, she was right!!

Review: “The Luck of Madonna 13” by E. T. Ellison

Review: “The Luck of Madonna 13” by E. T. Ellison

Joe Murphy | June 30, 2004May 31, 2024

Usually, as I’m reading a novel, I get an idea of how I’m going to start off the review. Usually a theme coalesces and is fully formed by the time I reach “The End.” But with The Luck of Madonna 13, by E. T. Ellison, I honestly have no idea where to begin, other than to say that this is easily the weirdest book I have ever read. Which must be a good thing, as I whole-heartedly believe that was one of the author’s intentions.

Review: “Necronomicrap” by Tim Frayser

Review: “Necronomicrap” by Tim Frayser

Joe Murphy | February 13, 2005August 10, 2024

The chapbook Necronomicrap: A Guide To Your Horoooscope, by Tim Frayser, mixes astrological “facts” with obvious lampooning. For example, while you can use the book to learn the names of Saturn’s moons, I highly doubt you should share Frayser’s interpretation that the moons regulate “various aspects of human flatulence.”

Review: “The Ghost Brigades” by John Scalzi

Review: “The Ghost Brigades” by John Scalzi

David Moldawer | December 24, 2005June 3, 2024

Ghost Brigades is a pageturner with surprising emotional rewards, but I’m hoping that Scalzi plans to write more books in this universe, because as it is there are too many ideas here for his own good.

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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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