The discounts for independent authors may be ending in the Kindle store, but Amazon still has a few titles on sale from major, bestselling authors, including Janet Evanovich, Douglas Preston and even Stephen King.
Lean Mean Thirteen ($3.72) by Janet Evanovich. It's too bad that the first in the series isn't discounted, instead, as I dislike starting in the middle of a series. At one time you could get the first three for under $10, but Three Plums In One is now $15.40 (still it's under the price of all three as stand-alone volumes, which are $7.19 each).
In the thirteenth book in the series, the stakes are raised even higher as Stephanie Plum finds herself in her most dangerous, hilarious, hottest, chase yet. With her loveably offbeat family along for the ride (as well as a few new faces), there's no doubt that the Stephanie Plum novels put the "fun" in dysfunctional.
Plum Lovin'($3.93 )is part of the Stephanie Plum Between-the-Numbers Novels series.
Mysterious men have a way of showing up in Stephanie Plum’s apartment. When the shadowy Diesel appears, he has a task for Stephanie—and he’s not taking no for an answer.
Annie Hart is a “relationship expert” who is wanted for armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. Stephanie needs to find her, fast. Diesel knows where she is. So they make a deal: He’ll help her get Annie if Stephanie plays matchmaker to several of Annie’s most difficult clients.
But someone wants to find Annie even more than Diesel and Stephanie. Someone with a nasty temper. And someone with “unmentionable” skills.
Does Diesel know more than he’s saying about Annie Hart? Does Diesel have secrets he’s keeping from Stephanie and the two men in her life—Ranger and Morelli? With Stephanie Plum in over her head, things are sure to get a little dicey and a little explosive, Jersey style!
The Codex ($4.99), by Douglas Preston, just squeaks under my unofficial $5 limit for bargains. Most of Preston's books (the Pendergast series) are co-authored with Lincoln Child, but he proves in this one that he can stand-alone. The book description is pretty generic, mentioning only family, greed and power, but this is a tale of an ancient Mayan Codex of medicinal plants, worth billions to the pharmaceutical industry (whether to use or to suppress), hidden in a jungle along with other priceless objects, complete with a villain to thwart the quest to find the treasure. Sounds a lot like an Indiana Jones plot, actually.
Stephen King's Riding the Bullet ($2.00) was originally released as an ebook and only later found it's way into print. It makes you wonder if the Kindle exclusive, UR ($2.99) will do the same thing, someday.
"I've never told anyone this story, and never thought I would -- not because I was afraid of being disbelieved, exactly, but because I was ashamed...and because it was mine."
Thus begins the tale of a hitchhiker who gets picked up by a driver from the other side of the great divide. A Stephen King ghost story in the grand tradition, Riding the Bullet is the ultimate warning about the dangers of hitchhiking.
Colorado Kid ($3.99) isn't one of King's highest rated novels, possibly because some reviewers have trouble with the heavy Maine accents and the novel's conversational style (it's told entirely as a conversation between two newspaper journalists). Still, if you are a pulp fiction fan or like an old-fashioned yarn, you might want to check it out.
On an island off the coast of Maine, a man is found dead. There's no identification on the body. Only the dogged work of a pair of local newspapermen and a graduate student in forensics turns up any clues, and it's more than a year before the man is identified.
And that's just the beginning of the mystery. Because the more they learn about the man and the baffling circumstances of his death, the less they understand. Was it an impossible crime? Or something stranger still?