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Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Get Mom a Kindle for Mothers Day (or maybe not) Contest

If you are stumped on what to get your mother (or grandmother) for Mother's Day, you might want to consider a Kindle (yes, you can get one delivered by then, with overnight or second day delivery). Chances are, you got your love of reading from one or both of your parents, who read to you when you were young (if you don't like to read, you probably will never see this blog, so that segment of the population can safely be ignored).

If you've noticed that your Mother doesn't read as much anymore, it may be due to physical factors that she has to overcome. If she needs larger print, the books are both more expensive and harder to handle. Even those with regular print books find that many are now much larger in size than before, as novels are often many hundreds of pages, while trade paperbacks use both thicker paperstock and a larger than "normal" font size (though not as large as a "large print" book). That added size can be a problem as we age, especially with books that don't lay flat on their own. I've found that although I can read these massive tomes, I really don't like to (and with my Kindle, I no longer have to, for the most part). For those who have significantly deteriorated eyesight, the TTS feature (which still works on practically all Kindle books; in fact, I have yet to see a report of a book where it has actually been disabled, although Random House has said they will do so for their titles) can re-open the door to the worlds locked inside books.

I don't know about your parents, but I do know mine won't be learning braille in their 90's, just so they can get access to a restricted set of published works. I do know that my mother-in-law (who is in her 90's) is exactly the type that these features are designed for. She can still see (with extra light and a magnifying glass) enough to work the menu, but no longer well enough to read even large print books. TTS isn't perfect, but it does work and it works with anything in the Kindle store and at no extra cost, not just on a few, higher priced selections that might sell in large enough quantities to pay off for publishers. The only reason I haven't purchased a Kindle for her -- she lives in a remote area with no Whispernet and doesn't have a computer or access to get books any other way (yes, these areas still exist, in the northern mid-west, especially when you get into towns of pop. 300 or less). Since she no longer drives (and it's a two-day drive to get there for us), the only way a Kindle would work well would be to preload the books (keeping her on my account, plus loading it up with some free classics) and either fly up for a visit when she needs a refill (we could drive to a Whispernet area in about an hour or two or just use my netbook to hook up and download them from Amazon) or just ship it back and forth between us, which would let me restock it with fresh titles in only about a week's turn-around time and at very little cost.

My mother, on the other hand, already has a Kindle (the original version) and we now have four Kindles in the family (Dad got the K2, since the buttons are less prone to be accidentally pressed). Otherwise, I'd be all set in what I was getting her this year. My second choice would be a Wii game (seriously, after the Kindle and the computer, this occupies her free time much more than television). The biggest problem, though, is that the one title coming out that I think she would really like (EA Sports Active) won't be out until May 19 (that and she is likely to have already ordered it herself). She already has (and uses) My Fitness Coach, Active Life Outdoor Challenge, Rayman Raving Rabbids TV Party (I and my nieces beat my brother soundly on this one when he came to visit last month), Dance Dance Revolution and she recently mentioned she was ordering both We Ski and Snowboard and Shaun White Snowboarding (no, she isn't Supermom, although I like to think so).

Like the Kindle, she didn't think she wanted a Wii when they came out, but I talked her into it. When Mario Kart Wii came out, we went to a midnight sales event (Sam's Club - no one thinks to go there and we had no problems getting one). The Wii Fit (with the balance board) was pre-ordered the day it was available at Amazon (good thing, as they sold out nearly immediately and stayed that way for a long time). She is past retirement age and not only enjoys many of the games, she finds that they are good exercise (except for the boxing, which tends to make her upper back ache), especially the ones that use the balance board. She also avoids some of the titles geared towards the very active younger set (cheerleader games, for example) and has a few that just don't work well (Jillian Michaels Fitness, for example, which I can't make recognize the controls, either, and strongly recommend you avoid). The cool thing about EA Sports Active, though, is that not only is it not organized around a single exercise (Gold's Gym Cardio Workout should be called Cardio Boxing Workout), but looks like it will be able to download additional content later on. More exercises will mean that the "game" will be less likely to get boring, resulting in abandoning her (or your) workouts (not that she'll quit the WII - last I heard, she had caught every single fish in Fishing Master and was starting on Fishing Master World Tour; too bad we can't get her to enter one of the local bass tournaments and win us all a new boat).

I'd just get flowers and a card, but she's already said "no flowers" this year. So, what do you think? Should I just get her a gift certificate? Or something else? Leave me a comment with your suggestion and next week I'll draw a name at random to receive a (hardback) copy of A Lucky Child: A Memoir of Surviving Auschwitz as a Young Boy.

Mom - I know you are reading this! You are not eligible (besides, you can read my other copy just as soon as I get thru it). Happy Mother's Day!

By the way, that picture on the beach? Not my mom, obviously. She'd be out swimming in the ocean and save reading for inside, when it rained in the afternoon.

Free Ebook: The Pendragon by D.J. MacHale

Download a free PDF of The Pendragon (The Merchant of Death, Book 1) ($7.99 Kindle) by D.J. MacHale for free, compliments of Barnes and Noble. In the Synopsis section of the page, there is a link for the PDF download. While you are there, be sure to pick up one (or more) of the free short-story audiobooks that B&N has until May 16.

Pendragon is a Young Adult title, with an audience target of 12-15 year olds. However, if you enjoyed the current Amazon freebie The Alchemyst, you should enjoy this one, as well.

Book Description

Bobby Pendragon is a seemingly normal fourteen-year-old boy. He has a family, a home, and even Marley, his beloved dog. But there is something very special about Bobby. He is going to save the world. And not just Earth as we know it. Bobby is slowly starting to realize that life in the cosmos isn't quite what he thought it was. And before he can object, he is swept off to an alternate dimension known as Denduron, a territory inhabited by strange beings, ruled by a magical tyrant, and plagued by dangerous revolution. If Bobby wants to see his family again, he's going to have to accept his role as savior, and accept it wholeheartedly. Because, as he is about to discover, Denduron is only the beginning....

Monday, May 4, 2009

New Kindle to Debut This Wednesday in NYC!

Amazon has scheduled a press conference for Wednesday 10:30 AM (EDT) at the Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts at Pace University, located at 3 Spruce Street, New York City.

I got a heads up in this mornings email from Len Edgerly (of The Kindle Chronicles - you should listen to his weekly podcast about the Kindle, as well as sign up for his newsletter of breaking Kindle news/rumours). The location talked about just happens to be the former location of the New York Times, so it looks like the large screen for reading newspapers is the going to be announced.

Read more here in the Wall Street Journal report.

Updated: The new device is also being talked about in the New York Times (along with some other large screen devices, not expected until next year).

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Free Ebook: Down River by John Hart

I told you earlier this month about the free copy of John Hart's The King of Lies ($6.99 Kindle) in the Sony store. Now this and another of Hart's titles, Down River ($7.99 Kindle), are available as free downloads from the publisher. His latest novel, The Last Child, is due out May 12th ($16.47 Hardcover; no link yet for a Kindle edition) and the publisher has paid (some) attention to the rise in sales other authors have received from giving away free copies of their backlist. I say some attention, as they still insist on PDF giveaways, rather than a better ebook format, but free is free. This one looks like it should convert fine to a Kindle or other ereader format using Calibre, MobiCreator or the Kindle conversion service (remember, Amazon will start charging for this on May 4th, if you use wireless delivery). That's two free books and only two weeks to catch up before his new release!

Get the free PDF of King of Lies from McMillan here. This seems to be unavailable, although the link is still there on the publisher's web site.

Get the free PDF of Down River from St. Martin's Press here.

Book Description (Down River)

Hart makes a scorching return to Rowan County, where he drives his characters to the edge, explores the dark side of human nature, and questions the fundamental power of forgiveness. Adam Chase has a violent streak, and not without reason. As a boy, he saw things that no child should see, suffered wounds that cut to the core and scarred thin. The trauma left him passionate and misunderstood---a fighter. After being narrowly acquitted of a murder charge, Adam is hounded out of the only home he's ever known, exiled for a sin he did not commit. For five long years he disappears, fades into the faceless gray of New York City. Now he's back and nobody knows why, not his family or the cops, not the enemies he left behind. But Adam has his reasons.

Within hours of his return, he is beaten and accosted, confronted by his family and the women he still holds dear. No one knows what to make of Adam's return, but when bodies start turning up, the small town rises against him and Adam again finds himself embroiled in the fight of his life, not just to prove his own innocence, but to reclaim the only life he's ever wanted.

Bestselling author John Hart holds nothing back as he strips his characters bare. Secrets explode, emotions tear, and more than one person crosses the brink into deadly behavior as he examines the lengths to which people will go for money, family, and revenge.

A powerful, heart-pounding thriller, Down River will haunt your thoughts long after the last page is turned.

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Amazon to Charge by Megabyte for Personal Docs

You knew it was too good to last and the abundance of tools that let you get all your RSS feeds downloaded to your Kindle via Whispernet, essentially at no charge, has apparently forced a change. Although Amazon has always said they would charge a dime a download (essentially $3/month for a daily newspaper feed, for those using this type of service), they have yet to have charged anyone at all. Today, however, they have announced that not only will they start charging these fees (on May 4), but that they have increased the charge to 15 cents per megabyte, rounded up to the nearest megabyte (so a fifty percent increase in the lowest charge). Looks like those two newspapers a day I was reading thru Calibre (plus a weekly and monthly) would cost me about $14.25 a month (at the current average file sizes). Time to turn off the automatic downloads and start using the USB cable instead. Now more than ever, I wish the Kindle had wireless or bluetooth support, so transferring files at home were easier to accomplish (the USB connection on my computer is on the rear, back and in the floor).

On the positive side, free document conversion is still an option (I wish I could set up multiple email addresses for this, since we have four Kindles on one account, but it is manageable) and RTF and DOCX support is being added.