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“Cover to Cover” Episodes

The Rookie by Scott Sigler

Cover to Cover #237: Scott Sigler

October 16, 2006June 22, 2024 | 9 Comments
The Devil You Know by Mike Carey

Cover to Cover #271: Mike Carey / Lynda Williams

July 16, 2007June 8, 2024 | 4 Comments
Writers of the Future Vol XXI

Cover to Cover #196: Writers of the Future 2005

December 12, 2005June 21, 2024 | 3 Comments
The Fifth Ring

Cover to Cover #50: Mitchell Graham

February 20, 2003June 25, 2024
Rollback by Robert J. Sawyer

Cover to Cover #250: Robert J. Sawyer

February 12, 2007June 3, 2024 | 11 Comments
Bloor Noir

Cover to Cover #315A: Laurell K. Hamilton

June 23, 2008June 5, 2024 | 18 Comments

More “Cover to Cover” Episodes…

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Book Reviews

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: “Southern Fire” by Juliet McKenna

Review: “Southern Fire” by Juliet McKenna

David Moldawer | September 26, 2005June 1, 2024

Juliet McKenna is the thinking fantasy reader’s author, the kind who dreams up fantasy elements and then works out the implications of those elements with the precision and thoughtfulness of a scientist, or, well, an SF writer. It’s clear throughout Southern Fire that McKenna is spinning her tale out of a deep, rich, internally consistent tapestry of details and textures.

Review: “Bitten” by K. L. Nappier

Review: “Bitten” by K. L. Nappier

Lora Friedanthal | September 11, 2007June 14, 2024

I am not familiar with Nappier’s previous work, so the Beast mythos was new to me. And I found myself reading on so that I could understand the rules involved in her take on the werewolf legends. Hunters David and Max had managed, within the first chapter, to bring an “incarnation” of the Beast. Usually, one stops once the werewolf is dead. But not in this universe.

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.

Review: “Ilium” by Dan Simmons

Review: “Ilium” by Dan Simmons

David Moldawer | November 20, 2005June 21, 2024 | 3 Comments

This is an odd book. Simmons envisions a solar system several thousand years in the future. Earth is practically uninhabited—a few hundred thousand “old-style” humans are all that is left of us. So-called “post-humans” left the planet long ago for cities built on asteroids in orbit. The “old-style” humans are each allotted one hundred years of life, at which point they are faxed (quantum teleported) to the rings to live forever with the post-humans. Or so the ordinary humans believe.

Review: “Roil” by Trent Jamieson

Review: “Roil” by Trent Jamieson

Laith Preston | December 5, 2011July 27, 2024

Trent Jamieson’s Roil, the first book in The Nightbound Land duology, promises… and delivers.

Review: “The Complete Guide to Writing Fantasy”

Review: “The Complete Guide to Writing Fantasy”

Joe Murphy | September 2, 2003June 5, 2024

I heard recently that eighty-one percent of Americans believe they have a book in them. I believe if you polled fantasy fans, that number would be in the nineties. And I’m just talking novels, I’m not including all the movie and TV screenplays we have in mind. It’s one of the best aspects of being science fiction and fantasy fans: you live a big chunk of your life in your imagination.

But, ask anyone who has ever tried to write fantasy, and he or she will tell you. It ain’t easy. How do you make a fantasy world? How do I make up a type of magic that doesn’t seem stupid? How do I make interesting characters? And on, and on, and on.

Review: “Darwin’s Paradox” by Nina Munteanu

Review: “Darwin’s Paradox” by Nina Munteanu

Brian Brown | February 29, 2008June 15, 2024 | 2 Comments

Nina Munteanu weaves a good story that has some large concepts peppered through it. The story does have warts but they are easy enough to gloss over and dig into the main story. There are some nice twists and turns and rabbit holes to follow the tale down. I hope that future books have more about the world, the citizens who inhabit it, and the politics of city states.

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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