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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

Stars and Gods by Larry Niven

Cover to Cover #423A: Larry Niven

September 7, 2010June 17, 2024 | 1 Comment
Evolve: Vampire Stories of the New Undead

Cover to Cover #430A: Nancy Kilpatrick

November 2, 2010June 17, 2024 | 2 Comments
Burn

Cover to Cover #269: James Patrick Kelly / Seth Harwood

July 5, 2007July 3, 2024 | 6 Comments
The Fifth Ring

Cover to Cover #50: Mitchell Graham

February 20, 2003June 25, 2024
Forbidden Cargo by Rebecca K. Rowe

Cover to Cover #222: EDGE Science Fiction and Fantasy Roundtable

June 12, 2006June 22, 2024 | 6 Comments
The Course of Empire

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

December 18, 2006June 21, 2024 | 3 Comments

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Book Reviews

Review: “Queen of Dragons” by Shana Abé

Review: “Queen of Dragons” by Shana Abé

Debbie Walker | February 9, 2008June 1, 2024

If you want to read a book about dragons that can change into a human form or disappear into smoke, read this book. If you want to read a romance where the woman and man are both strong leading characters, read this book. I loved this book and can’t wait to find out what happens next. And I’ll have to go back and find The Smoke Thief and The Dream Thief, the previous books in this series.

Review: “The Sorority” Trilogy by Tamara Thorne

Review: “The Sorority” Trilogy by Tamara Thorne

Joe Murphy | October 14, 2003June 6, 2024

Tamara Thorne wrote The Sorority trilogy as the literary equivalent of a teen exploitation horror movie. It has dozens of girls in a sorority house, an evil sorority president, sex, ghosts, oral sex, dead football players, group sex, human sacrifice, and chipmunk sex. Reading a book like this makes me cry. In college I couldn’t get laid to save my life.

Review: “Dust” by Joan Frances Turner

Review: “Dust” by Joan Frances Turner

Tia Bowman | November 28, 2010June 8, 2024

In Dust we get to experience zombie matters from the eyes of the source, as it were, and what a strange experience it is. The undead are not romanticized in this novel, so you might not want to eat before or during your reading session. Nausea may ensue.

Review: “Daemon” by Daniel Suarez

Review: “Daemon” by Daniel Suarez

Michael Hickerson | February 23, 2009June 1, 2024 | 1 Comment

The story of how Suarez’s novel went from a self-published story to a major book contract and potential movie deal is one that will give hope to every aspiring writer out there. Suarez got his book into the hands of a target audience and created a buzz for himself that it was impossible for a conventional publisher to ignore. But the thing is–if “Daemon” weren’t a good book, no one would be talking about it. And “Daemon” is that good.

Review: “S.” by J.J. Abrams and Doug Dorst

Review: “S.” by J.J. Abrams and Doug Dorst

Stephen Carpenter | November 26, 2013June 8, 2024 | 1 Comment

The novel S. is less of a conventional story written using words than it is an experience using the book as an object that mystifies the reader into a multi-layered tale of intrigue, young romance, and mystery. S. is told through the imaginary novel, Ship of Theseus, written by a Kafkaesque V.M. Straka whose real identity is unknown.

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: “The Republic of Thieves” by Scott Lynch

Review: “The Republic of Thieves” by Scott Lynch

Michael Hickerson | December 2, 2013June 8, 2024

After years of anticipation and speculation, Lynch returns to the universe of his “Gentlemen Bastards” with the long-awaited third installment, The Republic of Thieves.

Was it worth the wait?

Absolutely.

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.

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