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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

The Course of Empire

Cover to Cover #241: K. D. Wentworth and Illustrators of the Future

December 18, 2006June 21, 2024 | 3 Comments
Nine Gates by Jane Lindskold

Cover to Cover #371A: Jane Lindskold

August 31, 2009June 8, 2024 | 1 Comment
Juggler of Worlds

Cover to Cover #332A: Edward M. Lerner

October 21, 2008June 18, 2024 | 3 Comments
Resurrection by Steve Alten

Cover to Cover #239: Steve Alten

December 4, 2006June 4, 2024 | 11 Comments
The Conan Chronicles Volume 1

Cover to Cover #280A: Robert Jordan, RIP

September 26, 2007June 22, 2024 | 5 Comments
Counting Heads by David Marusek

Cover to Cover #203: David Marusek

January 30, 2006June 9, 2024 | 5 Comments

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes…

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Book Reviews

Review: “Woken Furies” by Richard K. Morgan

Review: “Woken Furies” by Richard K. Morgan

David Moldawer | June 21, 2006June 9, 2024 | 1 Comment

Waiting to meet a friend for lunch the other day, I stood outside a restaurant in Manhattan’s TriBeCa with my face buried in Woken Furies, the latest book from Richard K. Morgan. The restaurant manager spotted me reading and approached me eagerly: “Is that the new Takeshi Kovacs?” The funny part is, this was the second time I’d been approached by a rabid fan while reading one of Morgan’s books.

Review: “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” Graphic Novel

Review: “The Wonderful Wizard of Oz” Graphic Novel

Darcy Low | August 19, 2010July 27, 2024

This graphic novel is perfect for anyone that has seen the movie or read the books, and wants to remember this great story. But more than that, this would be perfect if you have young kids that would be bored with the movie, but you want to share this with them. They would love this book and could act as a gateway to get them to read the novels.

Review: “7th Son” by J.C. Hutchins

David Moldawer | March 7, 2006August 9, 2023 | 1 Comment

Attention all you Earth-crack junkies out there. J. C. Hutchins’s 7th Son podcast novel is well worth checking out. It’s a taut, tense scifi thriller that’s got me hooked after only a few episodes.

Review: “Thirteenth Child” by Patricia C. Wrede

Review: “Thirteenth Child” by Patricia C. Wrede

Web Genii | May 14, 2011July 3, 2024

Thirteenth Child is a YA novel and in this novel Patricia C Wrede crafts a story that may remind you of Orson Scott Card’s “Seventh Son” series. In this case, the hero is a young girl named “Eff” coming to grips with her magical heritage.

Review: “Nexus” by Ramez Naam

Review: “Nexus” by Ramez Naam

Laith Preston | January 30, 2013May 31, 2024 | 1 Comment

Nexus is a thriller for the post-human age, Ramez Naam does a phenomenal job of taking modern cutting edge science and building a realistic world of the near future. In Nexus, Naam asks the question, “what if?”.

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: “Whitechapel Gods” by S. M. Peters

Review: “Whitechapel Gods” by S. M. Peters

Lora Friedanthal | June 7, 2008June 1, 2024 | 2 Comments

Up until now, steampunk has been, for me, an aesthetic. It makes the great heroes of my childhood even cooler. And it makes for computers that are beyond sexy. Something in the synthesis of technology and analog mechanisms strikes just the right chord with me. It’s like the most elegant Rube Goldberg imaginable, with style. And yet, I had never read anything from the genre that inspires these creative works of fabrication fancy.

Until now.

Review: “Parasite” by Mira Grant

Review: “Parasite” by Mira Grant

Michael Hickerson | November 30, 2013May 30, 2024

Mira Grant’s first novel Feed was one of the best novels of its year, garnering critical praise, a legion of fans and making the short list for the Hugo Award.

It deserved every bit of that attention thanks in large part thanks to a new take on the zombie thriller and a couple of interesting twists along the way that made me eager for the next installment in the trilogy.

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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