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Sunday, August 7, 2011

Books Under a Buck, Part I

This is the first of a few posts on books for 99 cents in the Kindle store (and some at other stores, as well). This first post is the 20 books currently on sale from HarperCollins. These should be he same price in all the major book stores, but I'll try to get links to the main ones here. It does appear that (at least at Amazon) the prices are for those in the US, only.

Stretch: The Unlikely Making of a Yoga Dude (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Neal Pollack

The hilarious true account of an overweight, balding, skeptical guy's unexpected transformation into a healthy, blissful yoga fiend.

Neal Pollack was out of shape. The hair on his head was thinning and the hair on his face was pretentious—traits a New York Times critic gleefully pointed out while panning his second book. Combined with the predestined failure of his punk rock band, it was almost too much for Pollack to bear. He was willing to try anything to get his life back on track . . . even yoga.

While struggling to master difficult poses without kicking other yogis in the face, Pollack actually, remarkably, began to feel better, both in body and mind. Soon he found himself immersed in the "weird and circuslike" world of yoga. He participated in a 24-hour yogathon, attended yoga conferences and Asian retreats, went to yoga rock shows, started getting regular assignments for Yoga Journal magazine, and, finally, began teaching yoga classes himself.

Stretch mercilessly lampoons the bizarre, omnipresent culture of yoga, but it's also a story of profound personal transformation. Pollack started off mocking yoga. Now he's become one of its most enthusiastic proponents.


Everything Is Going to Be Great: An Underfunded and Overexposed European Grand Tour (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Rachel Shukert

When she lands a coveted nonpaying, nonspeaking role in a play going on a European tour, Rachel Shukert—with a brand-new degree in acting from NYU and no money—finally scores her big break. And, after a fluke at customs in Vienna, she gets her golden ticket: an unstamped passport, giving her free rein to “find herself” on a grand tour of Europe. Traveling from Vienna to Zurich to Amsterdam, Rachel bounces through complicated relationships, drunken mishaps, miscommunication, and the reality-adjusting culture shock that every twentysomething faces when sent off to negotiate "the real world"—whatever that may be.

The Gospel of Anarchy (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Justin Taylor

In landlocked Gainesville, Florida, in the hot, fraught summer of 1999, a college dropout named David sleepwalks through his life—a dull haze of office work and Internet porn—until a run-in with a lost friend jolts him from his torpor. He is drawn into the vibrant but grimy world of Fishgut, a rundown house where a loose collective of anarchists, burnouts, and libertines practice utopia outside society and the law. Some even see their lifestyle as a spiritual calling. They watch for the return of a mysterious hobo who will—they hope—transform their punk oasis into the Bethlehem of a zealous, strange new creed.

In his dark and mesmerizing debut novel, Justin Taylor explores the borders between religion and politics, faith and fanaticism, desire and need—and what happens when those borders are breached.


Celebrity Chekhov (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Ben Greenman

  • Q: What do Tiger, Paris, Lindsay, Alec, and Oprah have in common with the enduring characters of Anton Chekhov?
  • A: Love, loss, pride, yearning, heartbreak, renewal, transcendence: the very stuff of life.
The immortal stories of Anton Chekhov have long entranced readers with their insights into the universal truths of human behavior . . . but you've never read them quite like this.
  • Former friends Nicole and Paris exchange prickly pleasantries in "Tall and Short."
  • Talk-show host Dave narrowly averts another potential domestic crisis in "A Transgression."
  • Reality star Kim shares her newfound notoriety with Khloe and Kourtney in "Joy."
In a witty, graceful, and revelatory feat of literary reinvention, acclaimed novelist and humorist Ben Greenman takes nineteen of Chekhov's greatest stories and recasts them with some of the best-known luminaries of our time—with eye-opening, and oddly ennobling, results.


Diary of a Very Bad Year: Interviews with an Anonymous Hedge Fund Manager (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Keith Gessen

The First Book from n+1—an Essential Chronicle of Our Financial Crisis

HFM: Where are you going to buy protection on the U.S. government's credit? I mean, if the U.S. defaults, what bank is going to be able to make good on that contract? Who are you going to buy that contract from, the Martians?

n+1: When does this begin to feel like less of a cyclical thing, like the weather, and more of a permanent, end-of-the-world kind of thing?

HFM: When you see me selling apples out on the street, that's when you should go stock up on guns and ammunition.


Bad Marie (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Marcy Dermansky

Bad Marie is the story of Marie, tall, voluptuous, beautiful, thirty years old, and fresh from six years in prison for being an accessory to murder and armed robbery. The only job Marie can get on the outside is as a nanny for her childhood friend Ellen Kendall, an upwardly mobile Manhattan executive whose mother employed Marie's mother as a housekeeper. After Marie moves in with Ellen, Ellen's angelic baby Caitlin, and Ellen's husband, a very attractive French novelist named Benoit Doniel, things get complicated, and almost before she knows what she's doing, Marie has absconded to Paris with both Caitlin and Benoit Doniel. On the run and out of her depth, Marie will travel to distant shores and experience the highs and lows of foreign culture, lawless living, and motherhood as she figures out how to be an adult; how deeply she can love; and what it truly means to be "bad".

Kapitoil (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Teddy Wayne

"Sometimes you do not truly observe something until you study it in reverse," writes Karim Issar upon arrival to New York City from Qatar in 1999. Fluent in numbers, logic, and business jargon yet often baffled by human connection, the young financial wizard soon creates a computer program named Kapitoil that predicts oil futures and reaps record profits for his company.

At first an introspective loner adrift in New York's social scenes, he anchors himself to his legendary boss Derek Schrub and Rebecca, a sensitive, disillusioned colleague who may understand him better than he does himself. Her influence, and his father's disapproval of Karim's Americanization, cause him to question the moral implications of Kapitoil, moving him toward a decision that will determine his future, his firm's, and to whom—and where—his loyalties lie.


Grab On to Me Tightly as if I Knew the Way (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Bryan Charles

A wise, bighearted, and hilarious look at one teenager's life by a remarkable new voice in contemporary fiction

It's 1992, and as Vim Sweeney deals with the recent end of his high school career and the uncertainty of his future, America shares his angst. In Seattle, Kurt Cobain reeks of teen spirit. In Washington, George Bush (the first one) has just finished rattling his saber at Saddam Hussein. And in Kalamazoo, Michigan, Vim is trying to put off adulthood and all that comes with it, whatever that is, for as long as he can. He's already juggling guitars, girls, and a long-absent biological father who's suddenly making noise about Wanting to Be Involved. And he still can't convince his friends why local schoolboy hero Derek Jeter is bound for obscurity.

Grab On to Me Tightly as if I Knew the Way traces Vim's stumble toward adulthood as he comes to terms with his parents, balances friendships and infatuation with varying levels of success, and accepts that the things he thought would last forever probably won't. Generous in spirit and laugh-out-loud funny, here is a novel that introduces a tremendous new talent and deftly captures the alternately amusing and harrowing process of holding on until you find your way.


Who by Fire (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Diana Spechler

Bits and Ash were children when the kidnapping of their younger sister, Alena—an incident for which Ash blames himself—caused an irreparable family rift. Thirteen years later, Ash is living as an Orthodox Jew in Israel, cutting himself off from his mother, Ellie, and his wild-child sister, Bits. But soon he may have to face them again; Alena's remains have finally been uncovered. Now Bits is traveling across the world in a bold and desperate attempt to bring her brother home and salvage what's left of their family.

Sharp and captivating, Who by Fire deftly explores what happens when people try to rescue one another.


Everything Is Wrong with Me: A Memoir of an American Childhood Gone, Well, Wrong (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Jason Mulgrew

A memoir of startling insight, divine comedy, and irreversible, unconscionable stupidity

Fans of Jason Mulgrew's wildly popular blog know that everything really is wrong with him. The product of a raucous, not-just-semi-but-fully-dysfunctional Philadelphia family, Jason has seen it all—from Little League games of unspeakable horror to citywide parades ending in stab wounds; from hard-partying longshoremen fathers to feathered-hair, no-nonsense, kindhearted mothers; and from conscience-crippling Catholic dogmas to the equally confounding religion of women. With chapter titles like "My Bird: Inadequacy and Redemption" (no, he is not referring to a parakeet) and "On the Relationship Between Genetics and Hustling," Everything Is Wrong with Me proves that, as Jason puts it, "writing is a fantastical exercise in manic depression"—but he never fails to ensure that laughter is part of the routine.

With echoes of Jean Shepherd transplanted to Philly in the eighties and nineties, this book is a must-read for every person who looks back wistfully on his or her childhood and family and wonders, "What were we thinking?"


Down and Out on Murder Mile (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Tony O'Neill

After exhausting their resources in the slums of Los Angeles, a junkie and his wife settle in London's "murder mile," the city's most violent and criminally corrupt section. Persevering past failed treatments, persistent temptation, urban ennui, and his wife's ruinous death wish, the nameless narrator fights to reclaim his life.

In prose that could peel paint from a car, Tony O'Neill re-creates the painfully comic, often tragic days of a recovering heroin addict.


Ugly Man (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Dennis Cooper

A short story collection from author of the George Miles Cycle, an interconnected sequence of five novels: Closer, Frisk, Try, Guide, and Period. His other works include My Loose Thread; The Sluts (winner of France's Prix Sade and the Lambda Literary Award); God, Jr.; Wrong and The Dream Police.

86'd (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Dan Fante

In Los Angeles, struggling telemarketer-writer and part-time drunk Bruno Dante is jobless again. The publication of his book of short stories has been put off indefinitely. Searching the want ads for a gig, he finds a chauffeur job. When Bruno calls the number in the ad, he discovers the boss is his former Manhattan employer David Koffman, who is opening a West Coast branch of his thriving limo service. Koffman hires Bruno as resident manager of Dav-Ko Hollywood under one condition: he must remain sober. But instant business success triggers an abrupt booze-and-blackout-soaked downward spiral for Bruno, forcing him to confront his own madness as he struggles to keep his old familiar demons from getting the best of him yet again.

A Common Pornography: A Memoir (Kindle, B&N, Google, iBooks), by Kevin Sampsell

Kevin Sampsell always thought he was part of a normal family growing up in the Pacific Northwest. He never wondered why his older siblings had different last names or why one of them was black. But when his estranged father passed away in 2008, his mother revealed to him some of the family’s mysterious and unsettling history. A history of betrayal, madness, and incest.

A Common Pornography is a uniquely crafted, two-pronged "memory experiment": a collection of sweet and funny snapshots from his childhood, and an unsensational portrait of a family in crisis. Sampsell blends the catastrophic with the mundane and the humorous with the horrific. From his mother's first tumultuous marriages and his father's shocking abuse of his half sister to Kevin's own memories of first jobs, first bands, and first loves, here is a searing, intensely honest memoir that exposes the many haunting shades of a family—both its tragedy and its resiliency.


Postcards from a Dead Girl (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Kirk Farber

Sid is going crazy...

A telemarketer at a travel agency, Sid is becoming unhinged and superneurotic. Lately he's been obsessed with car washes and mud baths. His hypochondria is driving his doctor sister mad. And it's all because of his ex-girlfriend, Zoe, who's sending him postcards from her European adventure, one that they were supposed to take together. It's all quite upsetting.

A fact-finding tour of local post offices—and a new friendship with postman Gerald—followed by a solo European jaunt will do little to ease his anxiety. A long talk with his mother's spirit in a wine bottle doesn't help either. But what he really needs are a few more tentative dates with the chatty Candyce. Sid needs to get over Zoe and find love again—even though Zoe, apparently, has no inclination to be gotten over.

Wonderfully poignant, funny, odd, and more than a bit macabre, Postcards from a Dead Girl marks the emergence of a truly gifted and original literary voice.


Town House (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Tish Cohen

Jack Madigan is, by many accounts, blessed. He can still effortlessly turn a pretty head. And thanks to his legendary rock star father, he lives an enviable existence in a once-glorious, now-crumbling Boston town house with his teenage son, Harlan. But there is one tiny drawback: Jack is an agoraphobe. As long as his dad's admittedly dwindling royalties keep rolling in, Jack's condition isn't a problem. But then the money runs out . . . and all hell breaks loose.

The bank is foreclosing. Jack's ex is threatening to take Harlan to California. And Lucinda, the little girl next door, won't stay out of his kitchen . . . or his life. To save his sanity, Jack's path is clear, albeit impossible—he must outwit the bank's adorably determined real estate agent, win back his house, keep his son at home, and, finally, with Lucinda's help, find a way back to the world outside his door.


The Average American Male (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Chad Kultgen

Are you ready to meet the average American male?

The accepted image of the Average American man as created by Oprah, Dr. Phil, network sitcoms, and a slew of other mass media outlets is one of an oafish retard happy to swallow down gallons of his significant other's crap in the hopes of being allowed to have sex with her once a week or at least watch some football. The unnamed narrator of AVERAGE AMERICAN MALE is in his late twenties, has an unimportant job, plays video games, and hangs out with his friends and his girlfriend. But that's not all. He unabashedly reveals every thought that goes through his head, from his sexual fantasies involving his annoying girlfriend and other women he encounters, his masturbation sessions while watching porn, and his disgust with his annoying girlfriend and a majority of the people he comes across. In the course of this hilariously honest book, our narrator suffers through a relationship with his fatassed girlfriend until he finds the perfect girl. But when he moves into the new relationship, he slowly learns that all women are pretty much the same, that man's true desires will never be fullfilled, and the decision between living life alone or biting the marriage bullet must be made.


I Am Not Myself These Days (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Josh Kilmer-Purcell

I Am Not Myself These Days follows a glittering journey through Manhattan's dark underbelly -- a shocking and surreal world where alter egos reign and subsist (barely) on dark wit and chemicals...a tragic romantic comedy where one begins by rooting for the survival of the relationship and ends by hoping someone simply survives. Kilmer-Purcell is a terrifically gifted new literary voice who straddles the divide between absurdity and normalcy, and stitches them together with surprising humor and lonely poignancy.

The Summer of Naked Swim Parties (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Jessica Anya Blau

Fourteen-year-old Jamie will never forget the summer of 1976. It's the summer when she has her first boyfriend, cute surfer Flip Jenkins; it's the summer when her two best friends get serious about sex, cigarettes, and tanning; it's the summer when her parents throw, yes, naked swim parties, leaving Jamie flushed with embarrassment. And it's the summer that forever changes the way Jamie sees the things that matter: family, friendship, love, and herself.

It Could Be Worse, You Could Be Me (Kindle, B&N, Kobo, Google, iBooks), by Ariel Leve

Meet Ariel. Her glass is half empty . . . and leaking.

If someone tells her everything will be okay, she asks: How do you know? If there's a wrong thing to say, she'll say it. If there's a downside to see, she'll see it. She lives in a permanent fear of what's to come. But at least she's prepared.

In these witty and entertaining tales from the front lines of woe, Ariel highlights the humor in our everyday anxieties and delivers insight that will ring hilariously true if you are inclined to view the world through gray-tinted glasses.

So whether you've been dumped by the love of your life, lost your job to the guy in the cubicle next to you, said the wrong thing at the party, or weren't invited to the party at all, Ariel is here to remind you that it could be worse, you could be her.

Two Free LGBT Novellas from All Romance

Here's a pair of LGBT novellas that are free from AllRomance, in several DRM-free formats and both with five lips on the sensuality meter! Neither is on Kindle, but both have mobipocket versions that can be loaded without any conversion.

Sink or Swim, by Xara X. Xanakas and Lissa Kasey
Book Description
Beau has always been the center of attention, the first responder, dive master, and all around life-saver. When he gets a job overseas, Abram feels that he has to follow his lover, but he still harbors doubts of his own worthiness.

Those doubts come to a head during the long flight to begin their new lives. How far is Abram willing to go to keep Beau to himself? Sometimes in matters of the heart, you just have to dive in and sink or swim.

Wanting, by Piper Vaughn
Book Description
Jonah Beckett has been in love with his older brother's best friend, Laurie, for years. When his boyfriend, Dirk, breaks up with him for refusing to put out, Jonah uses his heartbreak over the situation to ask Laurie to teach him all about sex before he starts college. Problem is, he made Dirk up, and he has no idea what will happen when Laurie finally finds out.

Free Book (iBooks) - The Great Bridge

The Great Bridge ($14.99 Kindle), by David McCullough, is free in the iBooks store. This is one of the Agency publishers, so the book should not be at different prices in different stores (especially not from Apple!), so be sure to take the extra step to leave a note as well as report the price.
Book Description
This monumental book is the enthralling story of one of the greatest events in our nation's history, during the Age of Optimism -- a period when Americans were convinced in their hearts that all things were possible.

In the years around 1870, when the project was first undertaken, the concept of building an unprecedented bridge to span the East River between the great cities of Manhattan and Brooklyn required a vision and determination comparable to that which went into the building of the great cathedrals. Throughout the fourteen years of its construction, the odds against the successful completion of the bridge seemed staggering. Bodies were crushed and broken, lives lost, political empires fell, and surges of public emotion constantly threatened the project. But this is not merely the saga of an engineering miracle; it is a sweeping narrative of the social climate of the time and of the heroes and rascals who had a hand in either constructing or exploiting the surpassing enterprise.
Click HERE to get the free book from iTunes.

Free Book (iBooks) - Jolie Blon's Bounce

Jolie Blon's Bounce ($7.99 Kindle), the twelfth title in the Robicheaux series by NYT best-selling author James Lee Burke, is free in the iTunes iBooks store. Thanks to reader Marilyn for the tip on this one!
Book Description
When a beautiful teenage girl is killed, the victim of a particularly savage rape, New Iberia, Louisiana, police detective Dave Robicheaux senses from the very start of the investigation that the most likely suspect, Tee Bobby Hulin, is not the actual killer. Though a drug addict and general ne'er-do-well, Hulin just doesn't fit the profile for this kind of brutal crime.

But when another murder occurs -- this victim a drugged-out prostitute who happens to be the daughter of one of the local mafia bigwigs -- all clues once again point to Tee Bobby Hulin, and the cries for arrest become too loud to ignore. The dead girl's father, however, prefers to take matters in his own hands and sets out to find -- and punish -- the killer himself.

But before Robicheaux can solve these crimes and bring the killer or killers to justice, he is forced to battle his own inner demons, including a painkiller addiction, a habit that begins as the result of a brutal and humiliating beating he suffers at the hands of the mysterious and diabolical character known as Legion. A fixture in the area for years, Legion was once the overseer on a local sugarcane plantation and now gets by doing odd jobs. In temperament, however, he's still the malicious and malevolent bully he always was, a man defined by evil and seemingly possessed with supernatural skills of survival.

Added to the mix, and on the good guy side of the balance sheet, is Clete Purcel, a longtime buddy of Robicheaux's and a confirmed boozer and womanizer. Clete comes to New Iberia for a visit and is quickly drawn into the struggle between the various forces of evil in the town, including Jimmy Dean Styles, a black man intent on maintaining his empire of corruption; Joe Zeroski, a trailer park mafioso with palatial aspirations -- and of course, Legion Guidry, the devil incarnate, in whom Robicheaux finds himself facing a challenge and an enemy unlike any he has ever known. And soon, what began as a duel of wits has turned into a dance of death.
Click HERE to get the free book from iTunes.

If you want to report a lower price, be sure to see the new section I've included on the Reporting a Lower Price to Amazon post, on how to find the web page address for an iBook. This is one of the Agency publishers, so the book should not be at different prices in different stores (especially not from Apple!), so be sure to take the extra step to leave a note as well as report the price.

Free Audiobook - Hannah Coulter

Christianaudio teamed up with David C Cook to give away an unabridged audiobook download of Hannah Coulter ($8.99 Kindle; $14.98/$10.49 Audible), by Wendell Berry, narrated by Susan Denaker, for free during the month of August. Unlike many of their previous free offerings, this one is a novel that is classified as literary fiction, rather than religious in content. The paper/Kindle edition is from Counterpoint (which bought Shoemaker & Hoard), which specializes in fiction, literature, and poetry in addition to nonfiction, including history, memoir, biography, and nature. If you've been a follower here, you should have The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays of Wendell Berry, as it was offered free on Kindle the first of June. I've been eyeing his Bringing It to the Table: On Farming and Food ($8.84), with an introduction by Michael Pollan, ever since getting the book of essays,

Chronologically, this is the eighth book in Berry's loosely ordered Port William series, which take place in the same rural Kentucky in which this award-winning author resides. Port William is a fictitious town, near a bend in the river and those that like maps will find one on the author's website, along with a family tree that covers the people who populate his fiction. You'll find eight more of Berry's audiobooks (all of them that ChristianAudio has recorded), marked down to $4.98 each for this month only, at the bottom of the order page. Six of them are from the Port William series, plus two that make up the Port William Membership series. The same two titles are missing on Kindle (only one is in print), but there 30 titles on Kindle (including several poetry volumes), although only The Memory of Old Jack is currently at a bargain price ($14.95 $4.70).
Book Description
"Ignorant boys, killing each other,” is just about all Nathan Coulter would tell his wife about the Battle of Okinawa in November 1945. Life continued as some boys returned from the war while the lives of others were mourned. Nathan’s wife, Hannah, has time now to tell of the years since the war. In her eighties, twice widowed and alone, Hannah shares her memories: of her childhood, of young love and loss, of raising children and the changing seasons. She turns her plain gaze to a community facing its own deterioration, where, she says, “We feel the old fabric torn, pulling apart, and we know how much we have loved each other.” Hannah offers her summation: her stories and her gratitude for membership in Port William. We see her whole life as part of the great continuum of love and memory, grief and strength.

Hannah Coulter is the latest installment in Wendell Berry’s long story about the citizens of Port William, Kentucky. In his unforgettable prose, we learn of the Coulters’ children, of the Feltners and Branches, and how survivors “live right on.”
Get your free audio download HERE and scroll down the page for the discounted titles. The checkout process is very streamlined (a coupon code is no longer required), as is the download process (no longer do you have to download each part of the book separately). You can also send a gift download of the free audiobook to someone else!

After finishing your order, download a zip file with the entire audiobook: select MP3 if you want to be able to play the book on your Kindle (M4B for the iOS, iTunes or QuickTime). Unzip the contents to the \audiobooks directory on your Kindle (not \music) in order to have audiobook controls and see it on your Kindle home page.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Game Deal of the Day - Kona's Crate

Kona's Crate ($2.49), by indiePub, is today's Video Game Deal of the Day at Amazon. Looks like a simple enough concept - all you have to do is deliver a wooden crate to the Chief! Without breaking it, of course, which is the hard part. The crate sits on a little jet-powered platform and you maneuver through the obstacles, all while not smashing the crate into a wall or dropping it (unless you quickly catch it again). Even if you don't get the game, go over to Amazon's website and watch the second video attached to it, Kona's Crate Video, as it's just hilarious; I want one of those iPad like tablets that he uses to play this game, as it is PC only, at least in this version (but I searched the Android App Store and found a lite -- and free -- version for my phone).

I'm downloading the trial for game now, but have one concern - it says there is a "One-Time Delivery Charge" in the description, but other than the cost of buying it from Amazon, I don't see any type of pricing info (perhaps they just want you to know there is not any month fee to play it? or maybe it just refers to how the game plays on each level?). There also seems to be some discrepancy between the number of campaigns and levels, in the two sections that describe the game at Amazon.

I've played thru several levels, using the free trial (and on novice, at any rate, you can let the crate fall a long ways and bounce to the chief and still get credit) and there is no mention of a "delivery charge". The best part - laughing at how badly I am driving the little platform and still managing to deliver the crate. I still have more than 20 minutes on the trial, so will play it again a bit later today, before deciding to buy (but, decide today, as the price goes back up at Midnight in Seattle).

Game Description
  • 4 Campaigns, 80 Levels
  • Engaging Physics-Based Gameplay
  • Beat The Best - See how you stack up on OpenFeint driven leaderboards
  • Challenge your friends - post your best times to Facebook and Twitter
One-Time Delivery Charge
The task is easy: transfer a crate of unknown contents to Chief Kona before he becomes angry. Using a jet-powered platform as your vehicle, deliver the crate before it's destroyed. Much harder to control than your average box, use your stellar maneuvering skills to thrust the crate through a maze of destructive elements. Adjust the gas of the platform with a sensitive touch as this crate is much more antsy than you think. But beware, the Chief can become mighty spiteful and will withhold the contents of the crate from you if you do not complete his task in a timely manner.

Blocked, Blasted and Banned
It begins as a simple mission but progresses into a challenging assignment. Maneuvering through 85 plus levels in a variety of graphically rich locations might seem easy, but floating blocks, steam geysers and TNT will block your path. Squeeze through the chief's twisting hallways and turn sharp corners at blinding speeds using your reflexes to earn time and skill-based awards along the way without upsetting the Chief – the most destructive force of all.

  • 5 campaigns featuring 85+ levels with additional campaigns, levels and other goodies coming soon
  • Continues support with free content updates
  • HD-Quality graphics
  • Engaging physic-based gameplay
  • Easy to pickup controls
  • Unlockable levels and achievements

Reporting a Lower Price to Amazon

This post is specific to Amazon, as there doesn't seem to be any method to perform this function at other ebookstores (nor do most of them seem to care if other stores are beating their prices, while, presumably, Amazon does). If you find a lower price on an item that Amazon sells, whether it is a Kindle book or not, you can report it to Amazon and often you'll see a price adjustment within a day or two (or even a few hours). Whether or not the price changes seems to be a function of whether the comparison site is also online, is it the exact same item, how many people report a price difference and some heavy duty calculations on the back end at Amazon that no doubt decides how much of a loss they are willing to take, to keep a certain amount of sales.

We are going to look at an example of a book that is, right now, free for nook readers in the Barnes & Noble store, but is still full price at Amazon. This book isn't an Agency title, but I'll include at note at the end, in case you find one of those, for an added reporting mechanism you can use.

This is the book listing at Barnes & Noble for Pompeii: City of Fire. I have navigated to the nookbook page, specifically, not the general listing page that shows all the different formats available for sale, with the paper editions shown first and the nookbook version at the end. The easiest way to find this page is usually to just click the links in this blog. If you are already at Barnes & Noble and looking at the general book page, the look for the section titled All Available Formats underneath the paper editions, click the "+" next to the NOOK book label, then on the link that starts with "eBook" and shows the publication date and publisher (and FREE out to the right, in the pricing column).

Next, open a new tab or window and navigate to the Kindle book page at Amazon, as shown here. As you can see, Amazon is charging a higher price. You can also tell that this is not an Agency publisher, as there is not a line underneath the price that starts with "Sold by:" and has another line underneath, This price was set by the publisher to let you know that Amazon didn't set the price of the book.

If you look below the Product Description section, you'll see a section labeled Product Details. This is where you will find the link tell us about a lower price?, on the very last line of that section. Click on that link and you will then see a box that can be used both to tell Amazon about a lower price and to find a shortcut link for the book.

When you click on the option for Website (online), you'll see the area you need to fill in. First, copy and paste in the website address (in Firefox, make sure you have the Navigation Bar displayed under View Toolbars, so you can click to copy the address). At this point, you may have to do a minor bit of editing; many websites have a question mark (?) at some point in the address and Amazon doesn't really want the information after that question mark included. So, I paste in the address, then find the question mark if it exists and then just delete it and everything after it in the address. If you look closely at the Barnes & Noble listing above, you'll see that it does have a question mark and values after that, but that I've removed that portion of the address in the reporting box. Enter the price at the competing website (and I always put 0.00 for shipping, since there is no shipping on ebooks) and click the Submit Feedback button. You'll then see a Thank you for your feedback. message and the button will change to a Close Window; click that and you are done. All total, I calculate that reporting a lower price takes me well under 5 seconds, once I have both tabs open.

If you do run into a pricing difference on an Agency priced book (one that says This price was set by the publisher), I also go a step further and report them using the feedback links at the bottom. I use the very last choice, Is there any other feedback you would like to provide?, and in my note, I politely let Amazon know that I think the publisher is in violation of their Agency agreement, as they are selling the book at a lower cost thru another site (I also copy in the web address again) for customers in the region that I am in (and I tell them what region that is). This is important, as the value seen on a page may differ for those in different countries, both at amazon and at sites like Kobo, and some books are under Agency agreements in one region and not others. It's important to let Amazon know that you are looking at prices for the same region, in the two stores.

How to find the product page for iBooks
In order to report a lower price, you need a link to the book in a web page. For iBooks, this can be a bit tricky, especially as there is no way to search the iBookstore from the web (although you can now "browse" the store, it's every clunky and you are forced to browse by genre). From the iPad, of course, it's quite easy to browse and there are lists to show you the current top free books in various categories (although the search tools are nowhere near as comprehensive as the Kindle store). Recently, though, Apple updated the iTunes software for the PC and you can now browse iBooks from your desktop using iTunes, including doing a blanket search for a title and then displaying the book's product information (and even purchase it from iTunes, although you still cannot read it without a compatible, physical apple device). You can take advantage of a feature of the product page to find the web site page for any book -- there is a pull-down arrow right at the end of the price (or the "free" label). Click on the pull-down, then click on "Copy Link". Open up your browser and paste the address into the Navigation Bar (or use File Open on the menu). You should shortly be looking at the product page for that book and can use that address (even the info after the question mark on this one) to report a lower price to Amazon.

Free Book (nook) - Insights from Remarkable Businesspeople

Insights from Remarkable Businesspeople, from FT Press, is a repeat freebie (Mar '11) from Barnes and Noble. This book has previously been free on Kindle (three times), but is no longer available in the Kindle store.

Book Description
Get it straight from the top: secrets only the world’s best leaders can tell you!

What it takes to lead your team to greatness! Outstanding leaders tell you how to identify and fix even the biggest problems...get buy-in that’s real...balance external customers and internal processes...infuse creativity throughout your organization, and reinvent its future...get results, not salutes!

From world-renowned leaders and experts, including Captain D. Michael Abrashoff, Jim Champy, Fred Wiersema, Dean LeBaron, Michael F. Golden, Gary Hirshberg, and many more.


Click HERE to get the free book from B&N.

Friday, August 5, 2011

[Updated] Save 20% on Select Laptops (KSO)

Updated - see comments at end.

This offer is only for those with a Kindle with Special Offers:

Save 20% on Select Laptops at Amazon.com

Click on offer, then click on the link on the offer page to receive an email with the promotion code. Sign-up for this offer expires on August 8.

You'll get an email (right away), a link to the Special Offer page and a promotion code to enter at checkout. Once you have the promotional code, you have until September 8 to complete your purchase. Like previous offers, this one requires you to use the full checkout process in order to enter your promotional code. Also, like all Amazon sales that use promotional codes, if you have a gift card balance, you must use it for the payment (if there is not a sufficient balance, then you can pick which credit card or other payment to use).

This offer can be used more than once per account, so long as you have more than one KSO registered. Just click on the ad on each device to receive the individual promotion codes via email.

This offer was on the second page of special offers on my KSO, so be sure to click the Next Page button, if you don't see it right away. There are many, many laptops to choose from on this offer and, thankfully, there are links both on the offer page and on the menu bar on the left that can be used to trim down the list to the ones with features you are looking for, starting with the type (PC or Max) and operating system version you want. Once I picked Windows 7, for example, there were more selections for the level (Home Premium, Professional, Starter, Ultimate), along with lots of choices on screen size, processor type/speed, memory installed, etc.

If you were already looking for a laptop/notebook pc, and you find one on the list, this offer can save you quite a bit of money (I saw a little toughbook for over $3200, for example); in fact, it might be worth grabbing a Kindle with Special Offers just to get this offer, as you can easily save more than the cost of the Kindle itself - which means, you could get a savings on the laptop and a new Kindle to send off to college this fall with a student leaving for college. If you were looking at some of the less expensive laptops, you should still see a savings of $80 or more on most (from what I can tell), which is either a nice bonus on a KSO you already own or a good discount on a new one (just send your old one off with the student, if you want to keep the KSO at home, so you can sign up for any future offers!).
Combine this with the offer of $100 off a combined purchase of a Toshiba laptop and a Canon printer and the free XBOX with a Windows 7 PC offer for even greater savings.
Update: I've been getting emails, including personal messages on Kindle forums where I had not even posted about this offer, but had commented once in a KSO thread, asking me for my codes. I won't give my codes away, even if I do not use them and I caution you not to do so, either.

From the rules and restrictions:
  • Promotional code must be requested on Kindle with Special Offers device
  • You must have a Kindle with Special Offers device registered to the same account as the qualifying purchase.
  • Offer is non-transferable and may not be resold.
  • If you violate any of the Terms & Conditions, the promotion will be invalid.

So, you must have a KSO to ask for the code, you must have it registered to your account when you use the code, you cannot give the code away or sell it to someone else and if you get caught, at the very least the purchaser of the laptop would be liable for the promotional discount and you both risk losing your Amazon account.

Not worth it (if you are going to save $600 using this code, then buy a KSO today, get it tomorrow, use the code, get your laptop ordered and then decide if you want to send back the KSO in the next few weeks .. or just consider it a free kindle and the discount to be a bit less).

These codes are being sold on ebay - so, that destitute student who asks you for a code, may be a large ebay seller, in reality, who can sell the code with zero risk to his/her own Amazon account, but both you and the person using the code do risk having it suspended. For a person making a one-time laptop purchase, they may not care, but I would not like to lose access to my Kindle archives for such a reason.

For codes that cover Kindle books, you can use your code to gift a book (or, at least, it has worked for some in the past), but I would not give your code to anyone else. If it is mistakenly used for a family member, I'm sure Amazon will forgive it, but giving it to a stranger (or worse, getting caught selling it) may not have as happy a result.

Save $10 on select toys & games (KSO)

This offer is only for those with a Kindle with Special Offers:

Save $10 when you spend $25 on select toys & games at Amazon.com

Click on offer, then click on the link on the offer page to receive an email with the promotion code. Sign-up for this offer expires on August 8.

You'll get an email (right away), a link to the Special Offer page and a promotion code to enter at checkout. Once you have the promotional code, you have until September 9 to complete your purchase. Like previous offers, this one requires you to use the full checkout process in order to enter your promotional code. Also, like all Amazon sales that use promotional codes, if you have a gift card balance, you must use it for the payment (if there is not a sufficient balance, then you can pick which credit card or other payment to use).

This offer can be used more than once per account, so long as you have more than one KSO registered. Just click on the ad on each device to receive the individual promotion codes via email.

First, you probably have this offer on your device twice - don't bother trying to sign up twice, as you'll simply get the same code twice. Second, the choices on this offer are a bit limited, and it's mostly toys for small to pre-teen children. My favorite one, though, is Angry Birds: Knock On Wood Game, which means that no age group is now safe from being addicted to Angry Birds! Not only do I have this on my phone and my PC (and could put it on my nookColor), but you can now get this on your Roku (on Mom's Roku2, the remote is movement sensitive, which works quite well with the game), but now we can play it in the physical world! It's possible, though, that the Card Game and the Silly Bandz are going just a bit too far. Even if you don't have a use for this one at your house, keep in mind that it's not too much longer before the Christmas shopping season starts. Of course, for many kids, what they want for Christmas will have changed a dozen times between now and then.

New Kindle App - Ghostboy and the Nameless Grave

Ghostboy and the Nameless Grave ($2.99), by Robot Media, is an interactive Children's book for Kindle, creating using the same Active Content platform used for games and apps on Kindle. It says it is aimed at young readers, presumably so that they can read and choose their path on their own, but it also looks as if some of it would work for children who are still in the "reading to" stage, so that they can participate in the story as you read to them. At least one screen, though, does have you choose (for example), the missing vowel needed to make sense of a sentence, which would not work as well for non-readers. Then again, you can probably just answer those pages for them (the first time or two, thru) and still enjoy the book. If it turns out it is too advanced for your child, you can either return it for a refund (as with all Kindle content, within 7 days of purchase) or just hold on to it a bit, until your child's reading level has caught up with the story.

Book Description
Ghostboy and the Nameless Grave is an interactive children's book in which your child gets to make choices in the story and solve basic reading and writing puzzles that help advance the adventure.

Your child chooses an avatar and a name, and becomes ghostboy's best friend. The goal is to help Tristan (soon to be ghostboy) uncover the mystery of the little ghost girl. Why is she haunting Tristan on his birthday? How did she become a ghost? The answers lie within four illustrated chapters, and a secret epilogue which will be unlocked for those who solve all the puzzles.

As your child explores a town full of mysteries on the night before Halloween, their choices affect how the story unfolds, and only the most curious will achieve the maximum score. Did they miss something? They can always retrace their steps to find that detail they overlooked.

Ghostboy and the Nameless Grave is perfect for children who are established early readers. So if you are looking for a fun way to share the joy of reading with your kids, or if you are looking for a way for early readers to explore interactive fiction, then the haunting world of Ghostboy is for you.

Free Book (nook) - Footsteps in the Dark

Footsteps in the Dark ($9.39 Kindle), by Georgette Heyer, is this week's Free Friday book at Barnes and Noble. As I just commented below, there is a decent chance it will show up free at Amazon, but it may take a week. I still think that reporting the lower price to Amazon speeds that along.

Book Description
What begins as an adventure soon becomes a nightmare…

Locals claim it is haunted and refuse to put a single toe past the front door, but to siblings Peter, Celia, and Margaret, the Priory is nothing more than a rundown estate inherited from their late uncle—and the perfect setting for a much-needed holiday. But when a murder victim is discovered in the drafty Priory halls, the once unconcerned trio begins to fear that the ghostly rumors are true and they are not alone after all! With a killer on the loose, will they find themselves the next victims of a supernatural predator, or will they uncover a far more corporeal culprit?


Click HERE for the free book from B&N.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Free Audiobooks - Immortal and Wuthering Heights

Audiobook Sync's summer of free audiobooks continues. First, I've linked in the info from Amazon for each title (Amazon has the best reviews), then a link below to get your audio copies free. You can't get any titles that have been missed, but once they are loaded into Overdrive (which you will need to install, if you are not already using it for library books), they are yours to keep (there is no expiration date).

Two new titles each Thursday, so be sure to check back next week.!

Immortal ($7.99 Kindle; $22.60/$15.82 Audible), by Gillian Shields, read by Emily Durante.

Book Description
Wyldcliffe Abbey School for Young Ladies, housed in a Gothic mansion on the bleak northern moors, is elite, expensive, and unwelcoming. When Evie Johnson is torn away from her home by the sea to become the newest scholarship student, she is more isolated than she could have dreamed. Strict teachers, snobbish students, and the oppressive atmosphere of Wyldcliffe leave Evie drowning in loneliness.

Evie's only lifeline is Sebastian, a rebellious, mocking, dangerously attractive young man she meets by chance. As Evie's feelings for Sebastian grow with each secret meeting, she starts to fear that he is hiding something about his past. And she is haunted by glimpses of a strange, ghostly girl—a girl who is so eerily like Evie, she could be a sister. Evie is slowly drawn into a tangled web of past and present that she cannot control. And as the extraordinary, elemental forces of Wyldcliffe rise up like the mighty sea, Evie is faced with an astounding truth about Sebastian, and her own incredible fate.

Gillian Shields's electrifying tale will dazzle readers with suspense, mysticism, and romance.


Wuthering Heights (free Kindle; $20.97/$14.68 Audible), by Emily Brontë, read by Carolyn Seymour.

Book Description
Wuthering Heights, first published in 1847, the year before the author's death at the age of thirty, endures today as perhaps the most powerful and intensely original novel in the English language. The epic story of Catherine and Heathcliff plays out against the dramatic backdrop of the wild English moors, and presents an astonishing metaphysical vision of fate and obsession, passion and revenge. "Only Emily Brontë," V. S. Pritchett said, "exposes her imagination to the dark spirit." And Virginia Woolf wrote, "Hers...is the rarest of all powers. She could free life from its dependence on facts...by speaking of the moor make the wind blow and the thunder roar."

Click HERE to sign up for an account and get the free downloads. Don't forget, you'll also need to install the Overdrive software (there is a link at Sync). In addition, you end up clicking about three pages, for each book, before the audiobook actually downloads. Don't stop so long as you still see a button that talks about your Sync download (or until you see the Overdrive software open up). Once in Overdrive, you'll need to tell it where to save the files (just click OK to use the default location, since Overdrive will keep track of them for you), then again to actually start the download (by default, all parts of the book are downloaded; I would suggest not changing this in the last dialog box, just click on OK to get the download started).

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Free Book (nook) - Pompeii

Pompeii: City of Fire ($9.72 Kindle), by T. L. Higley, is free in nook format in the Barnes & Noble ebookstore, courtesy of Christian publisher B&H Publishing Group. If you enjoy the author's work, you may want to check out the one self-published novel she has, Marduk's Tablet, which is 99 cents both on Kindle and from B&N.

Book Description
Pompeii, a city that's many things to many people. For Cato, it's the perfect escape from a failed political career in Rome. A place to start again, become a winemaker. But when a corrupt politician wrongfully jails Cato's sister, he must oust the man from power to save her.

For Ariella, Pompeii is a means to an end. As a young Jew, she escaped the fall of Jerusalem only to endure slavery to a cruel Roman general. She ends up in Pompeii, disguised as a young man and sold into a gladiator troupe. Her anger fuels her to fight well, hoping to win the arena crowds and reveal her gender at the perfect time. Perhaps then she will win true freedom.

But evil creeps through the streets of Pompeii. Political corruption, religious persecution, and family peril threaten to destroy Ariella and Cato, who are thrown together in the battle to survive. As Vesuvius churns with deadly intent, the two must bridge their differences to save the lives of those they love, before the fiery ash buries Pompeii, leaving the city lost to the world.


Click HERE for the free book from B&N.

Kindle WiFi for $99; Kindle 3G for $129; No Ads!

First off, I'll be the first to say that I actually like the ads (well, the offers, anyway, while the ads don't bother me anymore than in a magazine or on TV, not that I spend much time looking at them). But, for those that do and for those who have been waiting for a mainstream ebook reader to break the $100 mark, today is the day. Amazon has refurbished units of both of their ad-free models on sale and you save $40-$60, depending on which one you choose. I have received a refurbished unit in the past (I bought an original Kindle refurb as our second Kindle and have had a couple of returns over the last few years) and there is absolutely no way to tell that the unit itself is any different from brand new, other than there is sometimes a colored dot on the outside of the box (they may now add "refurbished" to the label, but that wasn't even on mine). These have the exact same warranty, but one item is missing - there is no charging block to go with the included USB cable. All that means is that you will either need to charge it using your computer or buy a USB to AC adapter (I use a number of third party adapters, rather than the one that came with my Kindle, so that I can charge a Kindle and my phone at the same time). If you are picking up a second Kindle for your house, you can use the same charger you are using now, since you won't need to charge it every day, anyway (unlike my phone).

Kindle, Wi-Fi, Graphite, 6" Display with New E Ink Pearl Technology ($99.99)

Kindle 3G, Free 3G + Wi-Fi, 3G Works Globally, Graphite, 6" Display with New E Ink Pearl Technology ($129.99)

Free Kindle Subscription - Fantasy & Science Fiction Digest

There is a new edition of Fantasy & Science Fiction ($0.99/month), a Digest Edition that contains one story from that issue's full edition (which has now been renamed as an Extended Edition), plus the non-fiction portion of the magazine - editorials, book reviews, etc. The Digest Edition is free to subscribe to (and will remain so, after the first 14 day trial, just like the Amazon Daily is free).

Book Description
Amazon is thrilled to offer Kindle fantasy and science-fiction fans an exclusive free digest to the magazine that Stephen King calls "the best fiction magazine in America." Founded in 1949, Fantasy & Science Fiction magazine is the award-winning original publisher of such classics as Stephen King's Dark Tower, Daniel Keyes's Flowers for Algernon, and Walter M. Miller's A Canticle for Leibowitz. This free exclusive digest includes:
  • All nonfiction content: editor's recommendations, "Curiosities" (odd books of enduring interest), film reviews, book reviews, cartoons and humor, and "Coming Attractions" (highlights of each issue).
  • One full story from the current full issue of the magazine.
  • Short descriptions of the extended issue's remaining stories and "novelets."
If you are interested in reading the remainder of the stories and "novelets," subscribe to the extended edition.

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Half Price Kindle Games/App: Crosswords and Yoga

All six volumes of the NY Times Crosswords, by The New York Times, are half price in the Kindle store until August 8, which means they are now selling for $0.99 to $2.49 each.

Game Description
Each volume of NY Times Crosswords, comes with a unique bundle of world famous easy or challenging puzzles handpicked by The New York Times and edited by Will Shortz.

You can solve unassisted or get help using the 'reveal one letter' or 'reveal entire answer' functionality. You can even check your work for errors.

Enjoy the gold standard of crossword puzzles on your Kindle!


My Yoga Studio ($1.99 $0.99 Kindle), by Nickel Buddy, is half price in the Kindle store until August 8.

App Description
My Yoga Studio is like having a personal yoga teacher on your Kindle.

There are many benefits to practicing yoga. Done properly, yoga can help you increase your strength, flexibility, and balance. It can improve your posture as you become more aware of your body, and it can help you relax, even in the midst of a stressful environment.

My Yoga Studio will guide you step-by-step through a series of poses illustrated with a picture and a text description. As you move through the routine, a timer will count down, showing you how long to hold each pose before gently transitioning to the next. 25 different poses are included. You can use one of three included routines (Sun Salutation, Stress Melter, or Balance & Peace), do poses individually, or create your own custom routine. Exercises are designed to strengthen your core, and do not require any special equipment. As you can do these exercises anywhere you have floor space, My Yoga Studio is a perfect companion for frequent travelers or home use.

My Yoga Studio is ready to be your personal guide anytime you want to steal a few moments to center yourself.

New Kindle Game - Picture Cross Volume 1

Picture Cross Volume 1 ($0.99 Kindle), by puzzle.tv, is a new game in the Kindle store.

Game Description
Picture Cross Volume 1 is a puzzle game where you use logic to reveal a picture.

Starting with a grid of empty squares, Picture Cross gives you clues in each column and row with which you must work out whether each square in the grid is black or white. Find all of the black squares to reveal a themed picture.

Picture Cross Volume 1 includes 100 unique hand-made puzzles, each with an imaginative theme. Puzzles come in grids of various sizes, with 20 each of: 8 by 8, which are nice and easy, 10 by 10, 15 by 15, 20 by 20, and 25 by 25 which are very challenging!

Full and detailed instructions and helpful tutorials are included, and a hint feature is available if you get stuck. Work towards completing the whole set! After that, you can reset each puzzle so you can replay as many times as you like.

If you love logic puzzles, you'll love Picture Cross on Kindle!