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Thursday, March 1, 2012

Free Book - Out of Mormonism (K/N/E)

Update: 3/2/12 Now free from ChristianBook.

Out of Mormonism: A Woman's True Story (Main/UK), by Judy Robertson, is free in the Kindle store and from Barnes & Noble, courtesy of Christian publisher Bethany House.
Book Description
When Judy and Jim Robertson felt a spiritual void in their lives, they found ""the finest people in the world""

to embrace them and a beautifully packaged religion to entice them. Once drawn into Mormonism, they quickly climbed to leadership positions and became worthy temple Mormons, only to become disillusioned with the teaching and demands of the LDS church. From her unique insider's viewpoint, Judy shares her life as a Mormon woman, her rediscovery of the Jesus of the Bible, and how she and Jim found freedom as they left the LDS church in the face of persecution and confrontation.
Get the free ebook from Barnes & Noble.
Get the free ebook from ChristianBook.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

90 Day Free Trial Magazines (K)

When the Kindle Fire originally released, Amazon stepped up the free trial on selected magazines to a full 90 days, rather than the 14 days you get on most Kindle subscriptions. Some of these are for Kindle Subscriptions, even though they only worked on the Kindle Fire, while others are for subscriptions using the Android App on your Kindle Fire (which might mean you could also view that magazine on any Android device, if you can get the app to load; most, however, are Kindle Fire apps only). From what I understand, today is the last day to sign up for the 90 day free trials on these, so you might want to grab as many as you are interested in today (after all, you can change your mind on them anytime in the next three months).

One that I jumped on (and that is no longer available) was for Bon Appetit magazine. It was a Kindle Subscription option, so downloaded as an AZW file to the Kindle Fire and which I luckily backed up (as you'll see in a bit). I received an email that they were discontinuing this edition and that I should resubscribe instead using the Bon Appetit Magazine Android App. In addition, if I did so by today, I'd get another 90 day free trial. So far, so good, seems like a real win (90 days before, 90 days now, means 6 months free total!). It's the same price (and even a discount if you pay by the year), so, I canceled the old subscription and started the new one. The magazine downloaded fine and I actually like it a lot better as an App, versus as a Kindle Subscription. For one thing, there are live links everywhere, you can email yourself a link to the recipes with a couple of clicks (you can't clip anything in the subscription version, just look at the pretty pictures), and the layout is designed more for the Kindle Fire screen size (instead of having to fight to get the print large enough to read). I did have to enable in-app purchases (you can turn this off after subscribing) and use my PIN to get the subscription started, even though I won't be charge for the first three months.

There was only one problem -- although all the issues that I had marked to keep are still on the Kindle Fire (and I have them backed up, at least for this one device), the five issues that I had (three free, plus two paid) are now all gone from my archives. That's right - if you cancel a subscription on the Kindle, you lose ALL the back issues (at least, with this magazine, you do). Yet another reason I hate the subscriptions at Amazon and avoid them in most cases. I'd love to keep a digital archive of several magazines, but losing them if you cancel at any time, isn't acceptable. Zinio doesn't lose your content (and I can read it on nearly any device), so I use it whenever it's a choice. I'll have to wait and see if that's a problem with the Bon Appetit app, as well, but I'm starting to think it won't be. It seems that you get free access with a print subscription (just as I now do with Cooking Light - as soon as I installed the app, I had access to both of this year's issues); it turns out, it's cheaper to sign up for the print magazine (at least, currently) than to get the subscription via the App -- so after my free 90 days, I'm canceling and buying in print, which should give me the best of both worlds, at the lowest price.

The one subscription that I just started, that I don't mind having only digitally and don't care that past issues won't be retained, is TV Guide Magazine. It comes out weekly, isn't of much value after it's old and is only 99 cents a month. You can view this one on the Kindle Fire, but it's a bit tiny. I can zoom out with it in portrait mode, but have to move around the page to see anything (Why can't the landscape view to a zoomed 1/2 page, like Kindle books, instead of 2 pages side-by-side? If it did, it would be large enough to read!). However, this particular subscription allows you to view it on the iPad, as well, with the latest Kindle iPad app. There, it's large enough to read. It's also eligible for the 90-day free trial, so you'll get three months of it to decide, rather than just a couple of weeks. The only problem getting the longer free trial might be if you don't have a Kindle Fire, as one page at Amazon implies you need one to get the 90 days free, but I signed up for this one with an iPad as the primary device and got the 90 day free confirmation email (however, I do have a Fire on my account). Best of all? Since the subscriptions now show up in the archives, I can have it on the iPad and KFire (and Mom can view it on her iPad, as well).

Today's Deals

Today is the last day to enter the Kobo daily contest. If you've missed a day, you can answer prior day's questions after the daily question (and still get another coupon code). The coupon codes won will expire at the end of the contest (presumably today).

BooksOnBoard has a 25% off publisher's price sale on all eligible Sci-Fi titles with promo code Feb29!

For a bit of Whimsy, be sure to check out the Google home page today.

Now free on Kindle:

I'm Dancing as Fast as I Can ($0.99), by Barbara Gordon, is today's Kindle Deal of the Day.
Book Description
Barbara had it all: a successful career as an award-winning documentary film maker, a strong relationship, and plenty of friends. But a lingering problem with anxiety drew her into a dangerous Valium addiction. Her story is an honest, gripping look into addiction, her ill-advised cold-turkey withdrawal and the hospitalizations that followed, the worst the psychiatric field has to offer, and her painful yet persistent pathway back to functioning. Through it all, Gordon is a beacon of hope, actively choosing life over the alternative, even after journeying to the darkest depths of the human psyche.This beautifully written classic is a must read for anyone battling their own psychological demons, anyone in the mental health field, and everyone in need of an inspiring survivor story.

Puppy Love ($1.57 / £0.99 UK), by Frauke Scheunemann, is the Kindle Deal of the day for those in the UK (no US edition; too bad, this one looks cute).
Book Description
Hercules is a dachshund, and his new mistress Caroline is the greatest human being on earth. She's the one who rescued him from the animal shelter, who smells of summer and strawberries, and who laughs when the little pup snuggles up with her on the sofa.

So when Caroline is badly treated by her bossy, dog-hating boyfriend, Hercules decides it's high time he rescued his mistress for a change. And so begins an epic quest to find his favourite woman the perfect man...

Touching, original, and very funny, Puppy Love is a story about love, life, and the best friend a girl could ever have.

The Best American Short Stories 2011 ($1.99 Kindle, B&N), edited by Geraldine Brooks and Heidi Pitlor, is the Nook Daily Find, price matched on Kindle. What you won't see on the official Daily Find page, though, is that B&N has actually dropped the price of the series to $1.99 (just as Amazon did earlier this week).

In addition, I now see that there is a Nook Daily Find Families selection, Dora Helps Diego! (Dora the Explorer) ($3.19 Kindle, $1.44 B&N), apparently a new feature at B&N, where a kid-friendly choice is also posted daily. Doesn't look like Amazon has figured this one out, as it isn't price matched.
Book Description
Baby Jaguar is missing. Read along with Dora as she looks for her friend!

Note that this title works only on the Kindle Fire if purchased from Amazon and only on the NOOK Color, NOOK Tablet or NOOK Kids for iPad app if purchased from B&N. Children’s books on Kindle Fire now feature Kindle Text Pop-Up for reading text over vivid, full-color images. Just double-tap any text region and it will expand for easy reading (A software update may be required to view this title).
All of the titles below are $1.99 at Barnes & Noble today:
  • The Best American Short Stories 2011, edited by Geraldine Brooks and Heidi Pitlor
    Includes: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Megan Mayhew Bergman, Jennifer Egan, Nathan Englander, Allegra Goodman, Ehud Havazelet, Rebecca Makkai, Steven Millhauser, George Saunders, Mark Slouka, and others
  • The Best American Mystery Stories 2011, edited by Harlan Coben and Otto Penzler
    Includes: Lawrence Block, Brendan DuBois, Loren D. Estleman, Beth Ann Fennelly and Tom Franklin, Ed Gorman, Richard Lange, S. J. Rozan, Mickey Spillane and Max Allan Collins, and others
  • The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2011, edited by Mary Roach and Tim Folger
    Includes: Atul Gawande, Jonathan Franzen, Deborah Blum, Malcolm Gladwell, Oliver Sacks, Jon Mooallem, Jon Cohen, Luke Dittrich, and others
  • The Best American Essays 2011, edited by Edwidge Danticat and Robert Atwan
    Includes: Hilton Als, Katy Butler, Toi Derricotte, Christopher Hitchens, Pico Iyer, Charlie LeDuff, Chang-Rae Lee, Lia Purpura, Zadie Smith, Reshma Memon Yaqub, and others
  • The Best American Nonrequired Reading 2011, edited by Dave Eggers
    Includes: Daniel Alarcón, Clare Beams, Sloane Crosley, Anthony Doerr, Neil Gaiman, Mohammed Hanif, Mac McClelland, Michael Paterniti, Olivier Schrauwen, Gary Shteyngart, and others
  • The Best American Travel Writing 2011, edited by Sloane Crosley and Jason Wilson
    Includes: André Aciman, Christopher Buckley, Maureen Dowd, Verlyn Klinkenborg, Ariel Levy, Téa Obreht, Annie Proulx, Gary Shteyngart, William T. Vollmann, Emily Witt, and others
  • The Best American Sports Writing 2011, edited by Glenn Stout and Jane Leavy
    Includes: Paul Solotaroff, Sally Jenkins, Wells Tower, John McPhee, David Dobbs, Wright Thompson, P. J. O’Rourke, Selena Roberts, and others

Free Book - Secrets (K)

Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #8: Secrets, by John Jackson Miller, is now free to pre-order in the Kindle store. This is the last book in the series and if you'd rather have all eight collected into one volume, Random House has that available as a pre-order as well (currently on sale for $4.99). If you missed any, I have them all listed under Fantasy and Science Fiction on the Free Kindle Books page, here (and Amazon still has all of them, unlike some stores that have dropped to only one title).
Book Description
It’s the beginning of the end for this epic series in the thrilling final eBook installment, Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #8: Secrets. Two thousand years ago, Commander Yaru Korsin braved mutiny and desperation—and inspired his shipwrecked Sith tribe to rise up, seize, and dominate the planet Kesh. Now a shocking revelation about those legendary ancestors has thrown the Sith into turmoil, pitting one against the other in ever-growing clashes that could bring about their downfall. With his city descending into chaos around him, unassuming archivist Varner Hilts sets off for the forbidden temple, home to the wreckage of Korsin’s ship, Omen. Outnumbered by ruthless Sith warriors with nothing to lose, Hilts knows it may be a suicide mission. But he has a hunch that Korsin left something behind, something hidden until such an essential time as now—one final piece of knowledge that could save the rulers of Kesh from themselves and set them once again on the path toward a glorious destiny.

Buy One Get One Free Sale at Audible


As a Leap Day special, Audible is having a Buy One Get One Free Sale for members that have a credit on their account. It does appear to be limited to those in the US and if you have the very, very old use-it-or-lose-it 2 credits a month sale, it doesn't seem to work for you either. For the rest of us, though, we can shop as many times as we have credits stored up in the special BOGO store, getting two books for the price of one! The cart in the special store allows only two books to be added at a time, then you click the Confirm button and check out. Return to the BOGO page after checkout to repeat the process for each credit. The site is running a bit slow, but it looks like it's definitely worth the effort to explore all the categories today.

If you aren't already a member at Audible (a subscribing member, not just have a login), you won't be able to see the sale. However, you could join with the 2-Free Audiobooks Gold Listener plan and should be able to take advantage of the sale. If you decide not to keep the plan after the first 30 days, just cancel with no further obligation.