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Friday, April 26, 2013

UK Kindle Daily Deal 4/26

This Is Where I Am (£1.39 UK), by Karen Campbell, is the Kindle Deal of the day for those in the UK (no US edition).
Book Description
So we walked in the freezing night air, my daughter weeping into my neck, and me trying to shelter her inside my own thin coat. I could accept the sun had left us, but I struggled to understand where the moon was. At home, the moon and stars are so big, you can see by them, work by them through the night. Only thin glimmers here, cold specks in the muddy sky.Glasgow. A city of colour and contrast. A place where two worlds collide - and are changed forever.When the Scottish Refugee Council assigns Deborah Maxwell to act as Somali refugee Abdi's new mentor, the two are drawn into an awkward friendship. They must spend a year together, meeting once a month in a different part of Glasgow. As recently-widowed Deborah opens Abdi's eyes to her beloved city and its people, he teaches her about the importance of family - and of laying your ghosts to rest. All Abdi has brought with him is his four-year-old daughter, Rebecca, who lives in a silence no one can reach. Until, one day, little Rebecca starts talking. And they realise why she stopped.Heartbreaking, uplifting and unforgettable, This is Where I Am is a novel of loss and guilt, friendship and hope, and of what we can grow from the ashes of the past.

Nook Daily Find 4/26

All the Pretty Hearses ($6.83 Kindle, $1.99 B&N), the 26th in the Bed-and-Breakfast series by Mary Daheim, is the Nook Daily Find; should be price matched on Kindle later this morning.
Book Description
Cormac McCarthy has nothing on Mary Daheim—whose fabulous Bed-and-Breakfast mysteries win hands down when it comes to outrageous zaniness. In All the Pretty Hearses, Daheim,“the reigning queen of the cozies” (Portland Oregonian), embroils Hillside Manor hostess Judith McMonigle Flynn in a lethal case of insurance fraud and mystery meat gone bad, in the twenty-sixth installment of the hilarious, New York Times bestselling cozy mystery series that remains as fresh and funny as the very first.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Spring Fever Bargain Books, Part II

OK, now that you have books on hand to get your vegetable garden growing this year (or maybe joined a local CSA), you may want to pick up one or two cookbooks (is it possible to have too many good cookbooks?) for inspiration on how to consume all that produce this summer. Even if you aren't gardening yourself, there should be at least one title below that appeals, whether you want to eat more locally produced foods, try an exotic new recipe or just lose a little weight without resorting to processed, frozen dinners for every meal.

Animal, Vegetable, Miracle ($1.99 Kindle, B&N, Kobo), by Barbara Kingsolver [HarperCollins], is practically the bible of the local food movement.
Book Description
Bestselling author Barbara Kingsolver returns with her first nonfiction narrative that will open your eyes in a hundred new ways to an old truth: You are what you eat.

"As the U.S. population made an unprecedented mad dash for the Sun Belt, one carload of us paddled against the tide, heading for the Promised Land where water falls from the sky and green stuff grows all around. We were about to begin the adventure of realigning our lives with our food chain.

"Naturally, our first stop was to buy junk food and fossil fuel. . . ."

Hang on for the ride: With characteristic poetry and pluck, Barbara Kingsolver and her family sweep readers along on their journey away from the industrial-food pipeline to a rural life in which they vow to buy only food raised in their own neighborhood, grow it themselves, or learn to live without it. Their good-humored search yields surprising discoveries about turkey sex life and overly zealous zucchini plants, en route to a food culture that's better for the neighborhood and also better on the table. Part memoir, part journalistic investigation, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle makes a passionate case for putting the kitchen back at the center of family life and diversified farms at the center of the American diet.

"This is the story of a year in which we made every attempt to feed ourselves animals and vegetables whose provenance we really knew . . . and of how our family was changed by our first year of deliberately eating food produced from the same place where we worked, went to school, loved our neighbors, drank the water, and breathed the air."

The Beekeeper's Lament: How One Man and Half a Billion Honey Bees Help Feed America ($1.99 Kindle, B&N, Kobo), by Hannah Nordhaus [HarperCollins], is one I'd recommend to anyone that eats and is concerned both about the cost of food (everything from squash to almonds) and getting food locally. I know that our bees declined at the same time and for seemingly no reason (and that continues - we don't have bees at all after the winter, some years).
Book Description
Award-winning journalist Hannah Nordhaus tells the remarkable story of John Miller, one of America’s foremost migratory beekeepers, and the myriad and mysterious epidemics threatening American honeybee populations. In luminous, razor-sharp prose, Nordhaus explores the vital role that honeybees play in American agribusiness, the maintenance of our food chain, and the very future of the nation. With an intimate focus and incisive reporting, in a book perfect for fans of Eric Schlosser’s Fast Food Nation, Michael Pollan’s The Botany of Desire,and John McPhee’s Oranges, Nordhaus’s stunning exposé illuminates one the most critical issues facing the world today,offering insight, information, and, ultimately, hope.

Cooking Light Pick Fresh Cookbook: Creating Big Flavors from the Freshest Produce ($4.99 Kindle), by Mary Beth Burner Shaddix and the Editors of Cooking Light Magazine [Oxmoor House]
Book Description
Cooking Light Pick Fresh Cookbook shares the secrets to buying, growing, and cooking your favorite fresh fruits, vegetables, and herbs. Bursting with beautiful color photographs, this book is an invaluable resource for home cooks, novice gardeners, and food lovers alike. Cooking Light Pick Fresh Cookbook includes:
  • More than 200 full-color photos
  • Organized by fruits, vegetables, and herbs makes it easy to find recipes and information for the fresh produce you have right now
  • 150+ recipes that utilize the fresh taste of the season's best produce in main dishes, sides, salads, dessert, and more
  • Easy getting-started gardening tips from Mary Beth Shaddix, Cooking Light's expert gardener, for growing your own fruits and vegetables, whether it's in your backyard or on your windowsill
  • A complete nutritional analysis for each recipe

How To Eat ($1.99 Kindle, B&N), by Nigella Lawson [Hyperion]; I bought this a couple of years ago, on sale, but you can now get it for half what I paid.
Book Description
Through her wildly popular television shows, her five bestselling cookbooks, her line of kitchenware, and her frequent media appearances, Nigella Lawson has emerged as one of the food world's most seductive personalities. How to Eat is the book that started it all--Nigella's signature, all-purposed cookbook, brimming with easygoing mealtime strategies and 350 mouthwatering recipes, from a truly sublime Tarragon French Roast Chicken to a totally decadent Chocolate Raspberry Pudding Cake. Here is Nigella's total (and totally irresistible) approach to food--the book that lays bare her secrets for finding pleasure in the simple things that we cook and eat every day.

The Beginner's Guide to Preserving Food at Home: Easy Techniques for the Freshest Flavors in Jams, Jellies, Pickles, Relishes, Salsas, Sauces, and Frozen and Dried Fruits and Vegetables ($2.99 Kindle, B&N), by Janet Chadwick [Storey Publishing]
Book Description
A wonderful thing is happening in home kitchens. People are rediscovering the joys of locally produced foods and reducing the amount of the grocery budget that's spent on packaged items, out-of-season produce, and heavily processed foods. But fresh, seasonal fruits and vegetables don't stay fresh and delicious forever - they must be eaten now . . . or preserved for later.

For all the vegetable gardeners facing baskets overflowing with bright tomatoes, and for all the dedicated farmers' market fans and CSA members, The Beginner's Guide to Preserving Food at Home has the simple solutions that turn overwhelming bounty into neatly canned tomatoes, jars of jams and jellies, and crispy-tart relishes and pickles.

Organized in a friendly, food-by-food format, readers will find freezing, drying, canning, and storing instructions for each vegetable, fruit, and herb. In many cases, several ways to freeze or can a food are described, and there are often other preserving suggestions as well, such as making juice or fruit leather.

Everything is written with busy people in mind: these are the quickest, most efficient methods for preserving summer's bounty. Up-to-date information and clear, step-by-step instructions show even absolute beginners the way to a fully stocked pantry.

Sweet on Texas: Lovable Confections from the Lone Star State ($3.03 Kindle, B&N, $3.49 Kobo), by Robert M. Peacock and Denise Gee [Chronicle Book]
Book Description
This tantalizing tome features a hearty helping of must-eat recipes and must-meet dessert devotees, garnished with their fascinating stories. Learn about local Texan bakeries, the youngest pastry chef in the state, and the proper way to organize a Southern cookie swap. Divided into four tasty Texas regions, this cookbook features the big flavors of sweet treats like Deep Chocolate Meringue Pie, Citrus-Kissed Fig Ice Cream, Deep-Fried Coca-Cola, and Sweet Pineapple Tamales. With more than 60 classic and brand spankin' new recipes for cakes, cookies, puddings, cobblers, ice cream, pies, and pastries, Sweet on Texas is a sugar-coated tour through the culinary wonderland of the Lone Star State.

Make It Fast, Cook It Slow: The Big Book of Everyday Slow Cooking ($1.99 Kindle, B&N), by Stephanie O'Dea [Hyperion], is another one I bought at twice the current price! This cookbook does double duty: not only can you find recipes to use up your garden produce, you can use them to cook your meals while you are out gardening! Also of note: all the recipes are gluten free!
Book Description
Make It Fast, Cook It Slow is the first cookbook from Stephanie O'Dea, the extremely popular slow cooking blogger: affordable, delicious, nutritious, and gluten-free recipes to delight the entire family.

In December 2007, Stephanie O'Dea made a New Year's resolution: she'd use her slow cooker every single day for an entire year, and write about it on her very popular blog. The result: more than three million visitors, and more than 300 fabulous, easy-to-make, family-pleasing recipes, including:
  • Breakfast Risotto
  • Vietnamese Roast Chicken
  • Tomatoes and Goat Cheese with Balsamic Cranberry Syrup
  • Falafel
  • Philly Cheesesteaks
  • CrÈme Brulee
--and much more. Make It Fast, Cook It Slow is the perfect cookbook for easy, quick prep, inexpensive ingredients, and meals that taste like you spent hours at the stove.

In the Kitchen with A Good Appetite: 150 Recipes and Stories About the Food You Love ($1.99 Kindle, B&N), by Melissa Clark [Hyperion], I also bought last year (but at only a dollar more than this year's sale price). Even if you don't buy the entire book, be sure to check out the Amazon page, where you'll find a complete recipe for Spiced Chipotle Honey Chicken Breasts with Sweet Potatoes.
Book Description
“A Good Appetite,” Melissa Clark’s weekly feature in the New York Times Dining Section, is about dishes that are easy to cook and that speak to everyone, either stirring a memory or creating one. Now, Clark takes the same freewheeling yet well-informed approach that has won her countless fans and applies it to one hundred and fifty delicious, simply sophisticated recipes.

Clark prefaces each recipe with the story of its creation—the missteps as well as the strokes of genius—to inspire improvisation in her readers. So when discussing her recipe for Crisp Chicken Schnitzel, she offers plenty of tried-and-true tips learned from an Austrian chef; and in My Mother’s Lemon Pot Roast, she gives the same high-quality advice, but culled from her own family’s kitchen.

Memorable chapters reflect the way so many of us like to eat: Things with Cheese (think Baked Camembert with Walnut Crumble and Ginger Marmalade), The Farmers’ Market and Me (Roasted Spiced Cauliflower and Almonds), It Tastes Like Chicken (Garlic and Thyme–Roasted Chicken with Crispy Drippings Croutons), and many more delectable but not overly complicated dishes.

In addition, Clark writes with Laurie Colwin–esque warmth and humor about the relationship that we have with our favorite foods, about the satisfaction of cooking a meal where everyone wants seconds, and about the pleasures of eating. From stories of trips to France with her parents, growing up (where she and her sister were required to sit on unwieldy tuna Nicoise sandwiches to make them more manageable), to bribing a fellow customer for the last piece of dessert at the farmers’ market, Melissa’s stories will delight any reader who starts thinking about what’s for dinner as soon as breakfast is cleared away. This is a cookbook to read, to savor, and most important, to cook delicious, rewarding meals from.

The Belly Fat Diet Cookbook: 105 Easy and Delicious Recipes to Lose Your Belly, Shed Excess Weight, Improve Health ($2.51 Kindle, $4.99 Kobo), by John Chatham [Rockridge University Press], is a companion to The Belly Fat Diet ($4.99 Kindle, B&N, Kobo), but starts out with enough of the basis of the diet before jumping into recipes that you can probably skip the second title, completely. Note that unlike some of his Paleo diet cookbooks, many of the recipes in this one are not gluten free (and if you are new to a GF diet, there is gluten hiding in the spelt and bulgar, amongst other ingredients), although many can be easily adapted (by using GF oats, for example).
Book Description
Trim away your belly fat with a healthy and delicious diet.

Achieving a flat stomach is not about doing hundreds of crunches or worrying about how much you eat; it's about what you eat. The Belly Fat Diet Cookbook provides delicious recipes and teaches you how to eat more, weigh less, and achieve a flat belly.
  • Enjoy your favorite healthful dishes from breakfast to dessert, including Green Smoothies, Chicken Stir Fry, Baked Kale and Sweet Potato Chips, Almond Encrusted Salmon, and Berry Parfait.
  • Learn the dangers of excess belly fat from its harmful impacts on your liver, to increasing your risk of type 2 diabetes, heart disease, dementia, and a stroke.
  • The Belly Fat Diet Cookbook offers 105 healthy recipes, tips for a successful transition to the belly fat diet, and the Belly Fat Diet Shopping Guide to help you minimize your intake of sugar and processed carbohydrates.
Lose weight and lose your belly with The Belly Fat Diet Cookbook--a sustainable path to a longer, healthier, and leaner life.

In his latest work, bestselling author John Chatham blasts the myths surrounding belly fat. The groundbreaking research in The Belly Fat Diet Cookbook reveals a science-based approach to healthy eating and looking good, and it doesn't involve starving yourself.

The Belly Fat Diet Cookbook: 105 Delicious Recipes to Lose Your Belly, Shed Excess Weight and Improve Health provides an easy-to-follow health solution that gets fast, visible, long-lasting results from the inside out.

Spring Fever Bargain Books

I've been doing a bit of gardening lately (our veggies are mostly in and the cleanup of my herb beds is complete, but the flower beds still need (a lot of) work). So, naturally, I've also been browsing thru the gardening and cookbook sections on rainy days (like yesterday). Here are a few of the finds I've turned up.

The Heirloom Life Gardener: The Baker Creek Way of Growing Your Own Food Easily and Naturally ($1.99 Kindle, B&N), by Jere And Emilee Gettle [Hyperion]. If you raise veggies and have done any mail order shopping for seeds, you know who Baker Creek is; if you garden now or plan to, buy this book!
Book Description
Tired of genetically modified food every day, Americans are moving more toward eating natural, locally grown food that is free of pesticides and preservatives—and there is no better way to ensure this than to grow it yourself. Anyone can start a garden, whether in a backyard or on a city rooftop; but what they need to truly succeed is The Heirloom Life Gardener, a comprehensive guide to cultivating heirloom vegetables.

In this invaluable resource, Jere and Emilee Gettle, cofounders of the Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Company, offer a wealth of knowledge to every kind of gardener—experienced pros and novices alike. In his friendly voice, complemented by gorgeous photographs, Jere gives planting, growing, harvesting, and seed saving tips. In addition, an extensive A to Z Growing Guide includes amazing heirloom varieties that many people have never even seen. From seed collecting to the history of seed varieties and name origins, Jere takes you far beyond the heirloom tomato. This is the first book of its kind that is not only a guide to growing beautiful and delicious vegetables, but also a way to join the movement of people who long for real food and a truer way of living.

The Dirt-Cheap Green Thumb: 400 Thrifty Tips for Saving Money, Time, and Resources as You Garden ($2.99 Kindle, B&N, Kobo), by Rhonda Massingham Hart [Storey Publishing]. Storey has been a source of gardening books that I've read for many years (long before ebooks were around) and several of today's picks are from this publisher. I suspect that if you can't save at least the price of the book by using it's tips, you weren't trying very hard.
Book Description
Now gardeners don’t have to choose between frugal and fantastic! In The Dirt-Cheap Green Thumb, Rhonda Massingham Hart provides practical, time-tested solutions that will stretch your dollar farther than you ever thought possible, even as they yield beautiful, bountiful plants. From starting seeds to preserving produce, from composting to conserving water, Hart's advice ensures that you won't waste a scrap of time or money. Perfect for everyone from novices to experts, whether you are growing food, flowers, house plants, or landscape plants.

Don't Throw It, Grow It!: 68 windowsill plants from kitchen scraps ($2.99 Kindle, B&N, Kobo), by Deborah Peterson [Storey Publishing]. If you've shopped for plants lately, you know that just saving the cost of one plant will pay for the book (not to mention: how often do you even see culinary ginger for sale?).
Book Description
Magic and wonder hide in unexpected places — a leftover piece of ginger, a wrinkled potato left too long in its bag, a humdrum kitchen spice rack. In Don't Throw It, Grow It! Deborah Peterson reveals the hidden possibilities in everyday foods.

Peterson, former president of the American Pit Gardening Society, shows how common kitchen staples — pits, nuts, beans, seeds, and tubers — can be coaxed into lush, vibrant houseplants that are as attractive as they are fascinating. With Peterson's help, a sweet potato turns into a blooming vine; chickpeas transform into cheery hanging baskets; the humble beet becomes a dramatic centerpiece; and gingerroot grows into a 3-foot, bamboo-like stalk. In some cases the transformation happens overnight!

Don't Throw It, Grow It! offers growing instructions for 68 plants in four broad categories — vegetables; fruits and nuts; herbs and spices; and more exotic plants from ethnic markets. The book is enhanced with beautiful illustrations, and its at-a-glance format makes it a quick and easy reference. Best of all, every featured plant can be grown in a kitchen, making this handy guide a must-have for avid gardeners and apartment-dwellers alike.

Vertical Vegetables & Fruit: Creative Gardening Techniques for Growing Up in Small Spaces ($2.99 Kindle, B&N, Kobo), by Rhonda Massingham Hart [Storey Publishing]. Other than some fruit vines kept on trellises, we've never really done any vertical gardening (and I HIGHLY recommend you install a much stouter support than a clothesline, if you are growing kiwis ... and pay closer attention to the 20' recommended distance between than I did!), so I haven't decided to get this one ... yet.
Book Description
At last, an innovative solution for urbanites, apartment dwellers, and anyone who wants to grow food in small spaces — grow up!

Vertical Vegetables & Fruit shows how easy and fun small-footprint food gardening can be. Low maintenance and big harvests are just two of the benefits of using teepees, trellises, cages, hanging baskets, wall pockets, stacking pots, and multilevel raised beds to grow vegetables and fruit.

Whether your soon-to-be garden is an alley, a balcony, a rooftop, or just a windowsill, master gardener Rhonda Massingham Hart provides expert advice for constructing the site, preparing the soil, and planting and caring for vegetables and fruits to produce a hearty harvest. From beans on a tepee to tomatoes on a wire archway, melons on a slanted fence to cucumbers on a trellis, kiwis on a clothesline to strawberries in a pot, there are simple growing guidelines here to fit every gardener’s favorite tastes and site.

For experienced gardeners looking to try new techniques as well as first-time growers with tiny growing spaces, Vertical Vegetables & Fruit is the space-saving, harvest-enhancing guide to producing a bounty of fresh food in any location.

The Veggie Gardener's Answer Book: Solutions to Every Problem You'll Ever Face; Answers to Every Question You'll Ever Ask ($2.51 Kindle, $2.99 B&N, Kobo), by Barbara W. Ellis [Storey Publishing], looks like the perfect starter book for beginners (and should be helpful even for "experts" ... unless you are already writing your own books on this subject).
Book Description
For all of your gardening questions, The Veggie Gardener's Answer Book has the answers, gathered together in a sturdy little book for handy in-the-garden reference. You'll find helpful information on everything from planning and planting a vegetable garden to improving soil, caring for crops, organically controlling pests and diseases, and harvesting.

Starting Seeds: How to Grow Healthy, Productive Vegetables, Herbs, and Flowers from Seed ($2.99 Kindle, B&N, Kobo), by Barbara Ellis [Storey Publishing]. Despite the size of those several gallon potted tomato plants at your local Home & Garden store (which cost more, I suspect, than the tomatoes you'll get from them are worth), it's not to late to grow quite a bit of this year's garden from seed. It's a bit late for peppers, true, but just skip those sections now and read them this winter (when it is time to get those long-season plants started).
Book Description
Growing plants from seeds isn’t difficult; it just takes a little know-how. Now, gardeners of any experience level can get a jump on the growing season with this concise, straightforward guide. Expert gardener Barbara Ellis provides the basic information that you need and teaches you foolproof starting techniques for a variety of vegetables, herbs, and flowers.

Kindle Daily Deals 4/25

Celebrate National Park week with one (or all) of Chimani's National Park apps, all free this week.

Today's Nook Daily Find, Summer Rental, by Mary Kay Andrews, is now price matched on Kindle.

Today's Kindle Daily Deal is on more than 60 books top-rated non-fiction books in a variety of categories, from biographies and memoirs to history and science. Many also have deals on companion audiobooks that drop the combined price down to the $7-$8 range, as well. I've heard more than once that non-fiction readers get overlooked on the Daily Deals - now is your chance to browse thru the equivalent of two months of daily deals and stock up on reading for the summer.

City was named to the Best Non-Fiction 2012 list by Kirkus Reviews and Year of Meteors offers a different perspective on the events of 1860 that played such an important role in our nations history. Also hiding in the list is Gospel of Freedom: Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Letter from Birmingham Jail and the Struggle That Changed a Nation, which I recommended just yesterday as a companion to the free audiobook on Martin Luther King, Jr.'s letter. If you held off due to the price, now is the time to snag it; if you did buy at the higher price, you can do a quick return from the Manage Your Kindle page, then repurchase at the lower price today.


Today's Kindle Romance Daily Deal is The Bachelor Pact ($0.99), an omnibus of three romantic comedies by Rita Herron. All three were originally published (individually) by Love Spell (Dorchester), Ms Herron has self-published these and several other backlist titles in the Kindle store; many others you'll find are published by Harlequin (still reasonably priced, but not this low).
Book Description
Three men sworn to bachelor hood meet their matches in this trilogy about friendships, family and love!

Marry Me, Maddie
When Maddie is dumped on television, her brothers' best friend is enlisted to babysit her - but will they fall in love?

Sleepless in Savannah
A dating game show goes awry and forces Sophie to take a weekend date with a stranger instead of Maddie's brother -- the man she wants to be with.

I Love Lucy
All Lucy wants for the holidays is to be with her family and the man she loves -- instead she's hiding out from a stalker in a sixties & up community!

Today's Kindle SciFi/Fantasy Daily Deal is Search for the Buried Bomber ($1.99), by Xu Lei and Gabriel Ascher (Translator), with the the companion audiobook also $1.99. This is an Amazon exclusive translation of one of China’s most popular and highest grossing novelists, published by their AmazonCrossing imprint.
Book Description
The X-Files meets Indiana Jones in Search for the Buried Bomber, the first in Xu Lei’s Dark Prospects series of thrillers steeped in archeological myths and government secrets.

During China’s tumultuous Cultural Revolution, the People’s Liberation Army dispatches an elite group of prospectors famous for their work uncovering rare minerals to the mountains of rural Inner Mongolia. Their assignment: to bring honor to their country by descending into a maze of dank caves to find and retrieve the remnants of a buried World War II bomber left by their Japanese enemies. How the aircraft ended up beneath thousands of feet of rock baffles the team, but they’ll soon encounter far more treacherous and equally inexplicable forces lurking in the shadows. Each step taken—and each life lost—brings them closer to a mind-bending truth that should never see the light of day. Pride sent them into the caves, but terror will drive them out.

Through the eyes of one of the prospectors, bestselling Chinese author Xu Lei leads readers on a gripping and suspenseful journey.

Today's Kindle Kids Daily Deal is The Spaghetti-Slurping Sewer Serpent ($1.99), by Laura Ripes [Amazon Children's Publishing]. This is definitely not a title I remember from my childhood, but should appeal to most young readers.
Book Description
Sammy Sanders can't sleep. He is 77 percent sure that a spaghetti-slurping serpent lives in his sewer. Sammy and his sidekicks his sister, Sally, and their slobbery dog, Stan set out to discover the truth. What Sammy finds is a surprise in this tongue twisting mystery featuring the slippery letter S. The bright, fun artwork was created in colored pencil.

Age Range: 3 - 5 years