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Thursday, November 17, 2011

Get 30% off yoga and fitness (KSO)

This offer is only for those with a Kindle with Special Offers; expect the frequency of offers to increase (starting Thanksgiving Day, there will be a new offer every day, for the rest of the holiday season) and the time period to use the offer to decrease (such as the daily offers from Mastercard we've had). Keep your wireless on (not just 3G), or you may miss an offer entirely (my new Kindle Touch had the first offers when turned on, but was not connecting via Wifi, only 3G, so this morning was missing all the new offers is still only showing this one and not two others).

Get 30% off select yoga and fitness accessories

Click on the offer, then click on the link on the offer page to receive an email with the offer details. Sign-up for this offer expires on November 20.

You'll get an email (right away), a link to the Special Offer details page and a promotion code to enter at checkout. Once you have the promotional code, you have until December 20 to complete your purchase (less than the usual one month for KSO offers). Like previous offers, this one requires you to use the full checkout process in order to enter your promotional code.

Limit one offer per customer and per device.

There are a few interesting items on this one, even if you just want to get an early start on those New Year's Resolutions. The yoga chair, for example, is very popular as an office chair, for example, while the travel workout kits can be used at home, but don't take up a tremendous amount of space.

Today Only: Save $20 on Electronics and Toys

This offer is not limited to those with Kindle with Special Offers, but is open to anyone with a Mastercard (but ends at midnight tonight, Pacific Time (US).

Save $10 when you spend $100 on Electronics and Toys with your MasterCard® card at Amazon.com. Plus, get an additional $10 discount on a future purchase.

When you click thru the link above, you'll see a group discount code. Use this promo code during checkout, AFTER you set your payment method to any Mastercard; uou must use the full checkout process in order to enter your promotional code (no one-clicking). Also, like all Amazon sales that use promotional codes, if you have a gift card balance, you must use it for the payment - if you have more than a $100 balance, you may need to call and have your gift balance frozen while you enter the order; if you have less, whatever is there is used up first (so, you could put, say $89 on your Visa and apply it to your account as a gift card, then pay the remainder using your Mastercard).

Just like the last offer, you can use this one on the Kindle Fire; you'll get the $10 off $50 bonus by email within 30 days and can use it on any product sold "by Amazon.com", which should also include gift cards. Don't be fooled by the limited selection on the Special Offer page, either - you can click on More in Electronics or More in Toys and get about 70,000 more items.

Today's Deals

Additional formats on free books (now free on Kindle):

The Gospel According to Coco Chanel ($0.99), by Karen Karbo, is today's Kindle Deal of the Day.
Book Description
A modern look at the life of a fashion icon—with practical life lessons for women of all ages

Delving into the long, extraordinary life of renowned French fashion designer Coco Chanel, Karen Karbo has written a new kind of book, exploring Chanel's philosophy on a range of universal themes - from style to passion, from money and success to femininity and living life on your own terms.

Punishment ($1.59 / £0.99 UK), the first title in the Vik and Stubo series Norwegian author by Anne Holt, is the Kindle Deal of the day for those in the UK. The US edition is titled What is Mine and is selling for $10.99.
Book Description
Introducing the JOHANNE VIK series from the reigning queen of Scandinavian crime writing, Anne Holt.

A serial killer is on the loose - a killer of the worst kind. Abducting children and murdering them in an undetectable way that confounds the police, he then returns the child's body to the mother with a desperately cruel note:

You Got What You Deserved.

It is a perplexing and terrible case, and Police Superintendent Adam Stubo is the unlucky man in charge of finding the killer. In desperation he recruits legal researcher Johanne Vik, a woman with an extensive knowledge and understanding of criminal history. So far the killer has abducted three children, but one child has not yet been returned to her mother. Is there a chance she is still alive ?

Naked Economics: Undressing the Dismal Science ($2.99 Kindle, B&N), by Charles Wheelan and Burton G. Malkiel, is the Nook Daily Find, price matched on Kindle.
Book Description
Finally! A book about economics that won’t put you to sleep. In fact, you won’t be able to put this bestseller down. In our challenging economic climate, this perennial favorite of students and general readers is more than a good read, it’s a necessary investment—with a blessedly sure rate of return. Demystifying buzzwords, laying bare the truths behind oft-quoted numbers, and answering the questions you were always too embarrassed to ask, the breezy Naked Economics gives readers the tools they need to engage with pleasure and confidence in the deeply relevant, not so dismal science.

This revised and updated edition adds commentary on hot topics, including the current economic crisis, globalization, the economics of information, the intersection of economics and politics, and the history—and future—of the Federal Reserve.

Free Book (EPUB) - X is for Xmas

X is for Xmas, a collection of stories that are more in the Black Friday spirit of Christmas, is free over on Copia. This is an Adobe-ADE DRM'd EPUB book, but can be loaded in their reader or downloaded for any Adobe compatible reading app (I'm using Aldiko on the Kindle Fire). Looks like there are 20 total titles free there right now, so you may want to check them out if you haven't before; I just noticed a few pulp scifi selections and two anthologies that I've missed, so I'm downloading them now.
Book Description
Christmas is a time for giving, for receiving...and for mysteries, murder, and mayhem. We've collected ten Christmas stories, old and new, that will spike your eggnog, trim your tree, and hopefully add a dash of spice to your Christmas Cheer.

In So sit back, grab a mug of hot chocolate or eggnog, and prepare yourself for events most sinister. These ten great holiday tales are sure to send a chill down your spine.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Today's Deals

Additional formats on free books:

Deadly Little Secret ($1.99), by Laurie Faria Stolarz, is today's Kindle Deal of the Day.
Book Description
A supernatural romance about a 16-year old girl's attraction to the hunky, but mysterious new guy in school, whose touch has very unnerving effects -- from the author of the bestselling Blue is for Nightmares series.

About the Author
Laurie Faria Stolarz is the author of the hugely popular young adult novels Blue Is forNightmares, White Is for Magic, Silver Is for Secrets,andRed Is for Remembrance.Born and raised in Salem, Massachusetts, Laurie attended Merrick College and received an MFA in Creative Writing from Emerson.

The Land of Later On ($1.59 / £0.99 UK), by Anthony Weller, is the Kindle Deal of the day for those in the UK ($7.99 for those in the US).
Book Description
Kip—a New York jazz pianist whose career was cut short by a neurological disease—returns from a failed suicide attempt with a vivid, detailed memory of his journey through the afterlife. Resembling the world as he knows it, but unlimited in space and time, it's unlike any eternity he has contemplated. Its residents are those who choose not to reincarnate, which would erase all memory of who they once were. Kip has a quest: to find his beloved Lucy, a yoga teacher who shared his apartment for years but died of leukemia before he took his own life. Is she still here? Has she waited for him, or "gone back" to become someone else? In his odyssey across centuries and locales (Istanbul to the Marquesas Islands, India to Oklahoma and New Guinea) to find her, Kip is guided by Walt Whitman—who urges him to write this memoir on his return.

Triangle: The Fire That Changed America ($3.44 Kindle, B&N), by David von Drehle, is the Nook Daily Find, price matched on Kindle.
Book Description
On March 25, 1911, as workers were getting ready to leave for the day, a fire broke out in the Triangle Shirtwaist factory in New York’s Greenwich Village. Within minutes it spread to consume the building’s upper three stories. Firemen who arrived at the scene were unable to rescue those trapped inside: their ladders simply weren’t tall enough. People on the street watched in horror as desperate workers jumped to their deaths. The final toll was 146 people—123 of them women. It was the worst disaster in New York City history.

This harrowing yet compulsively readable book is both a chronicle of the Triangle Shirtwaist fire and a vibrant portrait of an entire age. It follows the waves of Jewish and Italian immigration that inundated New York in the early years of the century, filling its slums and supplying its garment factories with cheap, mostly female labor. It portrays the Dickensian work conditions that led to a massive waist-worker’s strike in which an unlikely coalition of socialists, socialites, and suffragettes took on bosses, police, and magistrates. Von Drehle shows how popular revulsion at the Triangle catastrophe led to an unprecedented alliance between idealistic labor reformers and the supremely pragmatic politicians of the Tammany machine.

David Von Drehle orchestrates these events into a drama rich in suspense and filled with memorable characters: the tight-fisted “Shirtwaist kings” Max Blanck and Isaac Harris; Charles F. Murphy, the shrewd kingmaker of Tammany Hall; blue-blooded activists like Anne Morgan, daughter of J.P. Morgan; reformers Frances W. Perkins and Al Smith. Most powerfully, he puts a human face on the men and women who died on March 25th. Triangle is a vibrant and immensely moving account of the hardships of New York City life in the early part of the twentieth century, and how this event transformed politics and gave rise to urban liberalism.

In large part it is a story of working women. Most of the victims of the fire were female immigrants; a majority from Russia and the Ukraine who worked to send their meager wages back home to support their families. In Russia, Jewish women prided themselves on being independent wage earners. Many were in the needle trade, so when they came to the new country their skills coincided with an explosion in the garment industry.

Clara Lemlich, born in the Ukraine, sailed to New York after the horrors of the Kishinev pogrom and became the sole supporter of her family. Grabbing the gavel away from leading male union leaders in a hall packed to the rafters—one-upping Samuel Gompers—she incited the first waist factory strike in 1909, a strike that would become 40,000 strong in a few months time and made up of mostly female workers.

The Triangle Factory was in a new building at Washington Place and Greene, and although it was an efficient, light-filled workplace filled with light, the owners Isaac Harris and Max Blanch, Jewish immigrant garment makers themselves who had made good, failed to follow the few safety codes then on the books. Their negligence, plus the fact that the new fire truck ladders only went up to the sixth floor short of the inferno on the eight and ninth floors, turned a lovely spring day in March, a Saturday just after closing, into a living hell. Many people were on the streets leaving work witnessed workers jumping to their deaths, bodies covering the fire trucks for an unprecedented carnage.

The trial that follows was one of the most sensational in New York history. Despite the community’s outrage, Manhattan’s flamboyant defense attorney, Max D. Steuer, the Johnny Cochrane of his day, won the owner’s innocence. They had locked the factory doors from the outside. One of the doorjambs—still firmly locked—was found in the rubble, but like Cochran’s blood stained glove, Steuer was able to hang a veil of doubt over the deadly lock, and win his case. He won his case despite massive evidence against the owners.

This is very much a woman’s story, and some of the women were at the very top of New York Society. Anne Morgan (J. P.’s daughter) and Alva Vanderbilt Belmont, to name a few, took on the cause of the strikers. The shirtwaist worker possessed amazing spirit and endurance, but it’s doubtful they could have lasted much longer without Progressive money. At just this low point, though, Anne Morgan joined the cause, and one of the things they did was to give a lunch to raise money for the strike fund at the newly founded Colony Club with some of the workers as luncheon guests. A scene where immigrant girls unfamiliar with silver knives, forks, and other finery sat down with rich socialites—radical chic in the making.

Francis Perkins was nearby in Washington Square at the time of the fire, and witnessing the event changed her life. She began her working career as a Triangle Fire investigator and ended it as the first woman Cabinet member in Franklin Roosevelt’s administration. She described the fire as the beginning of the New Deal.

Free Book (Kindle/iBooks/noDRM) - Second Star

Second Star, a backlist title from Dana Stabenow and the start of her Star Svensdotter trilogy, is free in the Kindle store, on iTunes and on the author's website (99 cents from B&N). Best of all, if you like this one, the other two titles are only $4.99 each in the Kindle store.
Book Description
When the Betelgeuse message was detected, it changed a lot of things on Earth. We began to look seriously outward, not with the heady optimism of the early days, but with deliberate calculation. We knew that Someone was out there, and that eventually, they’d be coming. If Earth didn’t occupy the High Frontier, it could be ours to lose.

Esther “Star” Svensdotter’s job is overseeing the completion of the American Alliance’s first O’Neill cylinder — a massive space hab capable of supporting thousands of colonists. It’s just weeks away from commissioning, and she’ll be damned if Luddite terrorists, squabbling bureaucrats, military takeovers or rogue AIs will stand in the way. Frontier justice on Ellfive sometimes involves an airlock — you don’t want to be on the wrong side of justice. Or the wrong side of Star Svensdotter.

Second Star is a tale of first contact, declarations of independence, and new frontiers.
Get the free ebook from the author's website (DRM-free).
Get the free ebook from iTunes.

Free Short Story (Kindle/EPUB/nook/iBooks) - This is Not a Love Story

Update: Now free on Kindle!

This is Not a Love Story ($1.99 Kindle), by Lydia Peelle, is another Agency published ebook that is free everywhere except the Kindle store. Report away!

A single short story from the collection Reasons for and Advantages of Breathing. No description on this particular story, but this is the collection synopsis:
Book Description
With this first book of fiction, a gifted young writer brings together eight superbly crafted stories that peer deeply into the human heart, exploring lives derailed by the loss of a vital connection to the land and to the natural world of which they are a part.

"Mule Killers" evokes the end of an era and of a grandfather's dreams when he decides to replace animal power on his farm with tractors. Two restless young girls in "Sweethearts of the Rodeo" live out their last summer of innocence, riding ponies recklessly and spying on their boss and the wealthy women who visit him. In "Phantom Pain," the Tennessee woods are a sliver of what they once were, men now hunt with GPS and cell phones, and the rumor of a dangerous panther on the loose stirs up a small town.

An unexpected vision of the beauty and mystery of life redeems the darkest moments in this stellar debut collection, a book that readers will want to read and reread.
Get the free ebook from Barnes & Noble.
Get the free ebook from iTunes.
Get the free ebook from Sony.

Free Book (Kindle/nook/iBooks/EPUB) - Salads for Every Season

Update: 12/8/11 Now free from Sony.
Update: 11/17/11 Now free on Kindle!

Salads for Every Season ($2.99 Kindle), a mini-cookbook by Myra Goodman, is free from Barnes & Noble and iTunes. I've reported the lower price to Amazon, but the more the merrier!
Book Description
Myra Goodman knows salad. Founder with her husband, Drew, of Earthbound Farm—the largest grower of organic produce in North America—she is the author FOOD TO LIVE BY and THE EARTHBOUND COOK, sumptuous cookbooks built on the idea of fresh, seasonal cooking. From those books, she has culled a useful and inspiring ebook short filled with 25 recipes for salads that showcase the best produce of spring, summer, fall and winter.

Colorful, healthy, and packed with delightful textures and flavors, these are what salads should be. For Spring and Summer: Strawberry-Tarragon Salad with Aged Balsamic Vinegar; Chopped Summer Vegetable Salad; Farro Salad with Edamame and Arugula; Summer Salad with Butter Lettuce, Raspberries, and Hazelnuts. Fall and Winter: Jicama and Orange Salad with Orange-Sesame Vinaigrette; Escarole with Walnuts, Dates, and Bacon; Roasted Beet Salad alla Caprese; Autumn Salad with Persimmons and Pomegranate Seeds. Plus a Field Guide to Salad Greens, sidebars exploring ingredients and salad basics, how to grow your own sprouts and infuse your own oils, and a chapter dedicated to versatile dressings and dips.

About this title: Workman Shorts is a line of subject-specific e-books curated from our library of trusted books and authors.
Get the free ebook from Barnes & Noble.
Get the free ebook from iTunes.
Get the free ebook from Sony.

Free Book (nook) - Success Is Not an Accident

Success Is Not an Accident: Change Your Choices; Change Your Life ($10.98 Hardcover), by Tommy Newberry, is free from Barnes & Noble, courtesy of Christian publisher Tyndale House. There isn't a Kindle edition, yet, but I expect it to be free if it makes it to the store in the next few day
Book Description
Tommy Newberry's best-selling Success Is Not an Accident (self-published in 1999) has helped over 100,000 readers achieve higher levels of success in both their personal and professional lives. Reminiscent of best-selling authors Stephen Covey and John Maxwell, Newberry teaches readers the power of goal setting, time management, visualization, and “self-talk” so they can achieve peak levels of performance in all areas of their lives.
Get the free ebook from Barnes & Noble.

Free Book (Kindle/EPUB/nook/iBooks) - Tiger Eye

Update: 12/16/2011 Now free from Kobo and Sony, for Canadians only.
Update: 12/13/2011 No longer free for those in the US, this is now free on Kindle and from iTunes for Canadians only.
Update: Now free on Kindle!

Tiger Eye ($7.99 Kindle), the start of the Tiger Eye series by Marjorie M. Liu, is free pretty much everywhere but in the Kindle store. This is an Agency published title, so I recommend reporting the lower prices, in the hopes that Amazon will drop their price.
Book Description
Long ago they roamed the earth -- dragons, tigers…shapeshifters -- men who wore the forms of beasts. Their world was magic. Now it is gone.

But some remain…

He looks out of place in Dela Reese's Beijing hotel room -- exotic and poignant, some mythic, tragic hero of an epic tale. With his feline yellow eyes, he's like nothing from her world,. Yet Dela has danced through the echo of his soul, and knows this warrior will obey her every command.

Hari has been used and abused for millennia. But he sees, upon his release from the riddle box, that this new mistress is different. There is a hidden power in Dela's eyes -- and with her, he may regain all that was lost to him. Where once he savaged, now he must protect; where before he knew only hatred, now he must embrace love. Dela is the key.

For Dela, he will risk all.
Get the free ebook from Barnes & Noble.
Get the free ebook from iTunes (for Canadians).
Get the free ebook from Kobo (Canadians only)
Get the free ebook from Sony. (for Canadians).

Free Book (Kindle/nook/iBooks) - A Parchment Paper Thanksgiving

A Parchment Paper Thanksgiving, a mini-cookbook by Brette Sember, is free in the Kindle store and from Barnes & Noble and iTunes.
Book Description
Forget those dirty pots and pans this holiday season—getting a great turkey dinner on the table is as easy as pie with parchment paper! In A Parchment Paper Thanksgiving award-winning author and food writer Brette Sember shows you how parchment paper cooking can revolutionize the way you cook a holiday feast. Save time, money, and sanity!
Get the free ebook from Barnes & Noble.
Get the free ebook from iTunes.

Free Book - Medical Error (K/N/E)

Update: 12/28/11 Now free from Barnes & Noble and ChristianBook.

Medical Error, by Richard Mabry, is free once again in the Kindle store, courtesy of Christian publisher Abingdon Press.
Book Description
Dr. Anna McIntyre’s life was going along just fine until someone else started living it. Her patient died because of an identity mix-up; her medical career is in jeopardy because of forged prescriptions; and her credit is in ruins. She thought things couldn’t get worse, but that was before she opened the envelope and saw a positive HIV test with her name on it.

Her allies are two men who are also competing for her affection. Dr. Nick Valentine is a cynic who carries a load of guilt. Attorney Ross Donovan is a recovering alcoholic. The deeper Anna digs to discover who’s behind the identity thefts the higher the stakes. Finally, when her life is on the line, Anna finds that her determination to clear her name might have been a prescription for trouble.
Get the free ebook from Barnes & Noble.
Get the free ebook from ChristianBook.

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Get $2 off select Glee CDs (KSO)

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

Get $2 off select Glee CDs

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 November 16 (tomorrow; this is less than the usual 4-day window for signup).

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 December 16 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).

Limit one offer per customer and per device; one item may be used with the promotion code.

Not a huge discount, but $2 off is up to 20%, so not too shabby, either, for the Gleeks on your Christmas list. All of the albums will also give you a $1 credit to use in the MP3 store, increasing the total savings, while the newest Christmas album adds an additional $2 credit.

Save $10 on Twilight Saga Movies (KSO)

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

Save $10 on Deluxe Editions of The Twilight Saga Movies

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 November 19.

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 December 19 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).

Limit one offer per customer and per device.

Other than the dates, this appears to be an exact duplicate of the earlier offer on these movies. You don't need to buy any movie tickets (nor are any involved in the offer), either, as it's just a discount on the DVD's.

Kindle Fire and Touch - First Impressions

Ok, it's here! I'll leave others to create unbox videos for their Kindle Fire - there will be thousands of those to choose from. Instead, I'm going to use this post (which I may update a few times) to record my first impressions of the Kindle Fire. It's a bit thicker than I thought it would be, with a rubbery black backing (which means it doesn't slip out of your hands as easily), and a bit more square than the nookColor (and heavier, it seems). After turning it on (what, wait to charge? never!), it connects via WiFi (so, be prepared with whatever security info you need at your location). It then registers with Amazon - since this one was ordered on my account and not marked as a gift, it immediately added itself to my account and skipped having to type in my name and password. It then wanted to download an update, but you can skip that if you want (I did, for now). Next, you are run thru a quick tutorial (four pages or so) on how to move using the carousel and how to pin content to the home page so that you can find it quickly.

Once on the home page, the Fire sync'd to my Amazon account (which took a while) and there are two items pinned in the favorites area: Pulse and Amazon. Clicking on Amazon opens up an Amazon shopping app and turns on 1-click ordering for the device. Basically it looks like the same app I have on my Android phone. Pulse is a news app and installs pre-configured with a few sources for news, sports, science, etc. The first thing I had to do after bringing up a page to read was adjust the brightness - I'm in a well lit room, but the default brightness was still much too high (great for outdoors, perhaps) and I could feel it in my eyes (which are probably tired from working on the computer all morning). From within the news item, you can quickly go back home (the carousel) or just bring up a list of other articles from the same news source or all the installed sources (what did I read - an article about trying to get students to use libraries instead of Google when writing research papers and an early review of the Kindle Fire!).

Back to the home page - it's still Syncing. Ok, I'll click on Apps - there's a list of all my Amazon Android Apps; I clicked to install Hulu Plus, then Audible. Netflix is supposed to be coming, but I don't see any sign of it yet in the Appstore (Update: Netflix is now there, but not easy to find). Audible, btw, required a separate login, even though most of use no doubt use our Amazon logins, now. While that was authorizing the new device, I jumped over to the Amazon Prime management page and confirmed - yes, I now had my 30 day trial of paid membership! Which means streaming videos for 30 days and I can rent two books (one this month and one next).

If you grabbed Quickoffice Pro yesterday, the phone version is the one that works with the fire (the HD version is for larger tablets). OfficeSuite Pro 5 is also compatible with the Fire, if you managed to get it when it was free last month. All of the Angry Birds apps seem to be compatible (and I have all but one from the free offerings in the last few months -- if you don't, you can still get them for 99 cents each; grab all three for less than the cost of one in the Nook app store.

One hiccup - I decided to get a game and bought it from the PC. There doesn't seem to be any way to send the app to a particular device and also no way to refresh the list of apps on the Fire itself. So, it thinks I should have to buy the app to get it on the Fire - it's only a dollar, so I thought, why not see what happens if you try to re-purchase an app. Apparently, the answer is that it hangs up and you have to force close the Appstore. There also needs to be a way to remove apps from your library (just as we eventually were able to do with Kindle books), as I need to get rid of some "free" versions of apps that I don't use, as I now have the full version of them, instead.

Back to my library, the two graphic novels I pre-ordered are downloading, as is a cookbook I sent to the fire. No sign of my archives, though (maybe I'll have to wait more than just a bit to see them there; I do hope they show up eventually, though). So, I'll take a break from books and wander over to Videos - looks like there is a Julia Child TV series (The French Chef, Seasons 1-10) included in the free Prime Shipping library. I'm not sure how much I'll absorb in 90 days, but there are definitely worse things I could be using. You watch the video in landscape mode, which puts both speakers on one side (the left) of the screen (so much for stereo). So long as the area isn't too loud, though, there is enough volume (controlled by tapping on the screen) that you can hear it easily (even the intro, which claims S&H Green Stamps is the sponsor!). At least the USB, power and headphones jack are all on the right side when watching (since I may end up having to plug in, eventually). Pressing the screen brings up controls for the video (scroll bar to back up, go forward), audio (slider for volume) and to leave the video. I paused the video, exited, then fired up my Roku - I should be able to start right where I left off, but that presumes I can find the same show again. The Roku controls are much more primitive and I ended up watching Ken Burns Jazz for a bit, instead. I finally found "TV Shows: A-Z" and then located "The French Chef"; and the resume function works just fine. Julia started back on the Beef Stew recipe right where I'd left off on the Fire. What they really need, though is a "last watched" option under the Amazon videos, so that it doesn't take a week to find what you were watching. On the Fire, itself, the show you were watching ends up on your shelf, so it's easy to find it quickly.

Back to books, there are now archives showing. Sadly, they are incomplete, just as with almost all my Kindle devices at this point. Neither of the books I mentioned in an earlier post are missing (in fact, two different books named Abyss are missing). There are a couple of books on Jobs, but not the Steve Jobs biography I bought this morning (the first books shown under "most recent" are some Vook editions from last June). With any luck, the archives will fill in some more, but, sadly, I suspect they will remain permanently broken on this Kindle, as well. Speaking of Vook Books, most of which have enhanced content, you can load some of them up on the Fire (even if the book page says you can't, since I did), but you won't get any of the enhanced content - it is still locked into an Apple device format, apparently. This isn't true of all enhanced editions, as Cornwell's The Fort won't even load up on the Fire in order to read it, even though you can read the text portion on pretty much every other Kindle device and app; I found a number of other enhanced editions that simply refused to load on the Fire (I'll try to see if I can get around that using Read Now, but that isn't looking very promising in the Silk browser, as I keep getting a prompt to allow offline use, but I can't get a click to register on the message box, so that it will continue -- the browser also keeps crashing on the Cloud Reader page and crashed once on the Manage My Kindle page).

So, what about the Kindle Touch 3G? It's here, it looks pretty much like the Kindle, minus the buttons for page turning (instead, you press your finger in the lower 2/3 of the screen, along the left side for back and anywhere from the middle to right side for forward) and any buttons other than "Home", which looks like a menu (it is a bunch of soft stripes). The menu is instead reached by pressing along the top edge of the screen. With any such presses, you have to stay long enough to register a "click", but not so long that you instead start selecting text (which either brings up the dictionary, zooms a picture, follows a hyperlink, etc, depending on where the press occurs). To delete a book or notice - you press and hold on the title on the home page, wait for a menu to appear, pick Delete at the bottom, then click again to confirm.

Rating Kindle Books and Managing Your Library

I suspect I'm not the only person waiting anxiously for their new Kindle Fire today. The one I ordered using the Mastercard promotion is on it's way (but won't be here until at least tomorrow), while the one I ordered immediately is "out for delivery", along with the Kindle Touch 3G I also ordered, so that I could do some comparisons and reviews (at least, that's what I'll tell the IRS at the end of the year! Sshhhhhhh...). My paid Prime membership hasn't kicked in yet (although I now have serial numbers assigned on all the Kindles), so I can't play with renting a book or watching streaming videos, yet. I did poke around in the magazines (more on that later) and found nine that qualify for the 90 day free trial (not Oprah, though, and not Bon Appetit, which is one I was looking for and which isn't even available yet).

So, after I was bored (and I didn't want to start any magazine subscriptions until I had the Fire in hand), I started playing around with the various methods that Amazon gives us to manage our libraries and keep track of which books we've read and what we thought of them. I'll skip the Twitter and Facebook integration -- I don't think anyone that follows me wants to know that I've bought or read a book and I definitely know there are books that I don't want to share the titles on, let alone my reading status or any notes or highlights I've made. What I am interested in, though, is how to keep track of what I'm reading and what I've read, both across several devices and from long ago, and which books I want to try to read next. Amazon gives you four different ways to keep track and, unfortunately, none of the choices talk to each other and there is little to no integration.

The easiest way is to send all books to your Kindle device, then move the books into collections: Read Next, Currently Reading, Read and categories for each genre, perhaps one for freebies, those for your kids (or the collection you show when in church or showing it off), etc. Collections are backed up and you can copy the collections from one device to another. With the newer Kindle for PC versions, you should be able to edit your collections using a decent keyboard, then periodically update the other devices on your account from there. Be aware, though, that if you update collections, it also changes which collection the books on your Kindle belong to - so, if that Kindle for PC app thinks you have just started a book ("reading"), but you've finished it on your Kindle ("read"), then if you update collections, the book will move back to "reading". The big advantage of managing your library on your Kindle is that you don't have to go anywhere else. Your book, notes, it's status and any rating are all in one place (the page after the end of the book can be used to set a rating, which is saved into the notes file of the book). The disadvantages include that your Kindle will get slower and slower, as it fills up, you can't set ratings in the Cloud Reader, the Android App or Kindle for PC (I suspect not in any of the apps) and there are no collections in the apps or older Kindle for PC editions (I don't have a Mac here to check it). You can remove your books from your Kindle after assigning them to a collection or making notes or adding a rating, in order to speed things up and if you re-download the book later on, your notes, collection and ratings will be sent with the book (provided you are allowing Sync on that device). Finding a book, though, can be a bit of a trick if you are managing your library on your Kindle - search can be quite slow (I usually give up and reboot the Kindle after several minutes), although it's much better on the Apps and Cloud Reader.

If you have a large library, though, be prepared for your archives to be incomplete - I have anywhere from a thousand to well over 2,000 books missing from the archives on my various devices and apps. Even Cloud Reader gives different results, depending on whether or not I use Firefox or Chrome to search (Chrome appears to be almost complete, though). Since some pages at Amazon don't show you that you've already purchased a book, either due to an ASIN change or a glitch with Amazon, I have learned to only depend on the Manage My Kindle page if I really want to know if I already have a book in my Kindle library. This problem also means that if I want to read a book from more than one Kindle or app, whether it's me reading in two places or two family members that want to read the book, I have to use the Manage My Kindle to send the book to each device and app, rather than retrieving it from the archives - if you can't see the book in the archive, you can't download it. This can be an issue if you have several people on your account and you don't want all of them to have access to your amazon login - you end up getting phone calls and emails/IM's asking for books to be sent to their Kindles ... assuming they even know that you have added a book to the library.

Another issue with managing your library on the devices is that you can no longer sort the archives by the date added. The original Kindle did this (even sorting by most recent or oldest) and latest Kindle for PC will sort your archives this by Most Recent, but the Android App, iPad app and older Kindle for PC will only sort by most recent when viewing downloaded items, just like the Kindle devices themselves. Again, if you have more than one person on your account, they won't know if you have purchased a new book unless you either send it directly to their Kindle or you send them an email to let them know (unless, that is, they have a photographic memory and browse the entire archive to see which titles are new).

So, that leaves us with online management. The most basic is the Manage My Kindle page that we all know and love. You can sort several different ways, see ALL of your titles (including library loans), can search by title or author and use some basic categories (which are assigned by Amazon, though, based on type of content). No collections, no notes, no ratings. It also requires the login password for the account. From that page, you can also send a book to any device or app (it gets downloaded on the next Sync), although it's much slower since their last "upgrade" of the page, as you now must hover over Actions, pick Send, then pick the device/app, then click Send. The page then is modified to show success and you can start over for the next person on your account ... if you are fast enough to hover and click send before the page notice is also automatically removed, generally causing your mouse to then hover and click on the wrong book. You can also load a book into the Cloud Reader from this page - even on the iPad, which was the only way it worked at all when it was first released, if you had more than a handful of books in your archive.

The next tool Amazon gives us to manage our book is the kindle.amazon.com page. You use your Amazon login, but it is a separate login required page (same password, though, so you can't give it out to all family members). Your notes and highlights made on a Kindle (or app) are saved to the information you'll find on this page, but collections and reading status are not. You can, though, mark books for "Reading", "Read", "Hope to Read" or "gave up", but you must do so on the website and can't see that info anywhere else. Every book you buy, on paper or Kindle, is added to the list automatically (under Hope to Read) and you can sort by title or author... but not by Most Recent. There isn't any search facility, either, only a "search Amazon" box, although you can see on the returned list if you own the book or not (although that may not be helpful if your search brings back hundreds of books). If, though, you are more interested in what other people think is important or funny, this is the place to go, as you can see all highlights that contained the word or words you search for. You can set ratings for your books here, too, but they don't sync with the one you set on the Kindle and you can't see them anywhere else, either. I do find this a useful site to look at only my own highlights, though, as I make a note in the book when I finish reading it, so can sort for that info (on the web page, not an actual search tool) if I can't remember a title I recently finished. This page has taken over the job of managing your Kindle content from the old Media Collections page, which is still there and lets you see all your books, movies, music and more in one place, is a place you can hide books in "the trash" (this leaves them in your collection, but hides them on your Kindle archives) and see the ratings you set at the end of a Kindle book (yes, they linked Ratings to this page, not to the kindle.amazon.com page that has replaced it and that they recommend you use instead). Unfortunately, this page can also be missing titles (I set ratings in four books today - one of them, Abyss (by Hagberg, David) is missing from the Collections page (and from most of my archives on devices); another, How to Flirt with a Naked Werewolf, is missing from the archive of almost all my devices, but does show up in Chrome Cloud reader and on one iPad). I wish they had simply added to this page's functionality, as I like it much better than the kindle.amazon.com page - it grabs up all your content (movies, books, Kindle books, etc), digital or not, and also allows you to add you own items (books you purchased elsewhere, for example). It also lets you print the items being shown (by type or after a search), unlike the other solutions above). You can also mark items as "shared" and set it to share new items automatically - then send a link to the page (use the permalink at the bottom of the page) to other family members, so they can see what books are in the library. You can also use tags for books here, but they don't correspond with collections (yet another stupid decision by Amazon, one that they could correct, but probably won't).

Another place that Amazon encourages you to use to manage your books is Shelfari, which they liked so much they bought it. It can be a bit tricky to find (choose Home, then the dropdown next to "Your Shelf", then Import books), but you can import all the books you've bought from Amazon directly into your shelf, with no typing. Unfortunately, once where, you are back to sorting by author or title, a few basic categories (read, reading, unread, favorites and "own" - which is set automatically if imported from Amazon). No collections and no searching, other than "books" as a whole - and here, I see many, many more titles returned in a search than on the kindle.amazon.com page. You can tell if you own a book in the results - there will be a green Edit button instead of a white Add button under the cover image. You can also share your shelf with others, but you'll have to add new books on your own as you purchase them from Amazon. No collections, no tags (at least, not on your shelves), but you can read reviews (mostly the same as are on Amazon's pages, though) and join discussion groups, if you'd rather do that than read your books. You can also set a rating for each book ... which is, again, completely independent of the other ratings.

So, there you have it, the methods of rating books (three total at Amazon) and managing your library (I think there are five, if you count the old Media Library pages). And, that's just using Amazon alone. The Media Library and Shelfari let you add both paper books and books purchased elsewhere; if you have a large collection, I prefer the Media Library over the others (although it, too, has it's limitations). You can print out a list of your books from the Media Library and (if you've completed enough annoying profile steps) export a list of them from Shelfari. Your notes you create on Kindle devices/apps are on the kindle.amazon.com page, but not in the Media Library (which as it's own notes) or Shelfari; collections are unique to Kindles and some apps (but not all), the Media Library has tags and kindle.amazon.com and Shelfari have no real management other than which ones you've read.

If you are looking for parental controls, by-the-way, you won't find any on any of the sites, from what I can tell. Instead, you'll have to resort to de-registering your kid's devices and apps when you are not buying them a book, then add them back each time you want to add content. You can block their internet access by removing permission in your Wifi router, although this won't work for the 3G Kindles or if they take a WiFi Kindle/Fire to school or McDonald's, etc. The newest nook Tablet promises parental controls, but it seems to be limited to blocking web access, not viewing archives, collections or making purchases.

So, you ask, which of the above do I use to manage my books? I do use the Manage My Kindle page quite a bit, out of necessity. Otherwise, I generally use either LibraryThing or an excel spreadsheet (which Mom maintains - thanks, Mom!) and a search of my hard drive for books I've downloaded elsewhere. If I could ever get LibraryThing caught up, I could use it for most things (but not sending archived books to my Kindle) and it is much better suited to larger libraries. It's another place for ratings and notes, but you can search to find a book in your collection pretty much any way you want. You can import your booklist via Shelfari or the Media Library (which preserves your ratings and seems to actually work better).

Back later ... I hear the UPS truck....

Today's Deals

Additional formats on free books:
Today is the last day to take advantage of these KSO deals:

The Magician's Elephant ($0.99), by Newbery Medalist Kate DiCamillo, is today's Kindle Deal of the Day.
Book Description
In a highly awaited new novel, Kate DiCamillo conjures a haunting fable about trusting the unexpected — and making the extraordinary come true.

What if? Why not? Could it be?

When a fortuneteller's tent appears in the market square of the city of Baltese, orphan Peter Augustus Duchene knows the questions that he needs to ask: Does his sister still live? And if so, how can he find her? The fortuneteller's mysterious answer (an elephant! An elephant will lead him there!) sets off a chain of events so remarkable, so impossible, that you will hardly dare to believe it’s true. With atmospheric illustrations by fine artist Yoko Tanaka, here is a dreamlike and captivating tale that could only be narrated by Newbery Medalist Kate DiCamillo. In this timeless fable, she evokes the largest of themes — hope and belonging, desire and compassion — with the lightness of a magician’s touch.

Age Level: 8 and up | Grade Level: 3 and up

State of Wonder ($2.07 / £1.29 UK), by Ann Patchett, is the Kindle Deal of the day for those in the UK (the US Edition is $12.99).
Book Description
There were people on the banks of the river.

Among the tangled waterways and giant anacondas of the Brazilian Rio Negro, an enigmatic scientist is developing a drug that could alter the lives of women for ever. Dr Annick Swenson's work is shrouded in mystery; she refuses to report on her progress, especially to her investors, whose patience is fast running out. Anders Eckman, a mild-mannered lab researcher, is sent to investigate. A curt letter reporting his untimely death is all that returns.

Now Marina Singh, Anders's colleague and once a student of the mighty Dr Swenson, is their last hope. Compelled by the pleas of Anders's wife, who refuses to accept that her husband is not coming home, Marina leaves the snowy plains of Minnesota and retraces her friend's steps into the heart of the South American darkness, determined to track down Dr. Swenson and uncover the secrets being jealously guarded among the remotest tribes of the rainforest.

What Marina does not yet know is that, in this ancient corner of the jungle, where the muddy waters and susurrating grasses hide countless unknown perils and temptations, she will face challenges beyond her wildest imagination. Marina is no longer the student, but only time will tell if she has learnt enough.

Nemesis ($6.99 Kindle, B&N), by Philip Roth, is the Nook Daily Find, price matched on Kindle.
Book Description
Winner of the Man Booker International Prize 2011

In the "stifling heat of equatorial Newark," a terrifying epidemic is raging, threatening the children of the New Jersey city with maiming, paralysis, lifelong disability, and even death. This is the startling theme of Philip Roth’s wrenching new book: a wartime polio epidemic in the summer of 1944 and the effect it has on a closely knit, family-oriented Newark community and its children.

At the center of Nemesis is a vigorous, dutiful twenty-three-year-old playground director, Bucky Cantor, a javelin thrower and weightlifter, who is devoted to his charges and disappointed with himself because his weak eyes have excluded him from serving in the war alongside his contemporaries. Focusing on Cantor’s dilemmas as polio begins to ravage his playground—and on the everyday realities he faces—Roth leads us through every inch of emotion such a pestilence can breed: the fear, the panic, the anger, the bewilderment, the suffering, and the pain.

Moving between the smoldering, malodorous streets of besieged Newark and Indian Hill, a pristine children’s summer camp high in the Poconos—whose "mountain air was purified of all contaminants"—Roth depicts a decent, energetic man with the best intentions struggling in his own private war against the epidemic. Roth is tenderly exact at every point about Cantor’s passage into personal disaster, and no less exact about the condition of childhood.

Through this story runs the dark questions that haunt all four of Roth’s late short novels, Everyman, Indignation, The Humbling, and now Nemesis: What kind of accidental choices fatally shape a life? How does the individual withstand the onslaught of circumstance?

Monday, November 14, 2011

50+ Free Books from Indie Authors

If you'd like to try out some new authors, all of them independently published, then head over to the Indie Collective's Blog Tour de Troops. Today is the last day, but you should still be able to comment on each author's book promotion post -- every comment gets you a free ebook (the one you comment on, unless otherwise noted in the post; generally a novel, but sometimes a shorter work) and earns you a chance for a free Kindle and gets one more ebook donated to troops overseas. Most of the authors will email you a coupon to pick up their book on Smashwords (a few may email you the book), so be sure to use an email account that you can check. There is often only a short period during which you can redeem your coupon, also, so be sure to pay attention to each author's rules.

Here's the full line-up of all authors and their blogs. You may have to scan down a post or two to find the one that mentions the promotion and has the directions for commenting in order to get your free book, since this has been a 4-day event.
  1. Elena Gray “Full Body Contact” http://elenagray.com
  2. Gracen Miller “Madison’s Life Lessons” http://madisonroadtohell.blogspot.com/
  3. Rachelle Reese & John E. Miller “The Reunion” http://dimestorenovel.blogspot.com
  4. Sherry Ellis “That Mama is a Grouch” http://www.sherryellis.blogspot.com
  5. Valerie Douglas “Heart of the Gods” http://valeriedouglasbooks.blogspot.com/
  6. Zoe Saadia “The Cahokian” http://blog.zoesaadia.com/
  7. Kip Manley “City of Roses” http://thecityofroses.com/
  8. John Zunski “Cemetery Street” http://johnzunski.wordpress.com/
  9. Kelli McCracken “What the Heart Wants” http://kellimccracken.com
  10. Taylor Lee “Struck by Thunder” taylorleebooks.com
  11. George Sirois “Exelsior” www.georgesirois.com
  12. JL Oakley “Tree Soldier” http://historyweaver.wordpress.com
  13. M. Todd Gallowglas “First Chosen”http://mgallowglas.blogspot.com/
  14. Rachel Thompson “My Indie Experience” http://www.rachelintheoc.com/
  15. Belinda Boring “Blood Oath” http://thebookishsnob.blogspot.com/
  16. Stacy Verdick Case “A Grand Murder” http://sostacythought.wordpress.com/
  17. David M Brown “Fezariu’s Epiphany” http://blog.elenchera.com
  18. C.C. Cole “Act of Redemption” http://www.shevata-cccole.blogspot.com
  19. Glenn Skinner “The Keya Quests” http://lostbowyer.wordpress.com/
  20. AK Taylor “Neiko’s Five Land Adventure” http://www.backwoodsauthor.wordpress.com
  21. Ron Vitale “Cinderella’s Secret Diaries” www.ronvitale.com
  22. Leia Shaw “Destiny Divided” http://www.leiashaw.blogspot.com
  23. Ali Cross “Become” http://www.alicross.com
  24. Julia Crane “Coexist: Keegan’s Chronicles” http://juliacraneauthor.com/blog/
  25. Lili Tufel “SAND” http://lilitufel.blogspot.com/
  26. Jackie Chanel “Untitled” http://jackie-chanel.com
  27. Augusto Pinaud “The Writer” http://augustopinaud.com/blog-tour-de-troops-a-simple-way-to-say-thank-you/
  28. Jill Paterson “Murder at the Rocks” http://www.theperfectplot.blogspot.com
  29. Melissa Foster “Chasing Amanda” http://www.melissafoster.com/blog/blog-tour-de-troops
  30. Ann Charles “Dance of the Winnebagos” www.anncharles.com/deadwood
  31. Stephen England “Pandora’s Grave” http://www.stephenwrites.com/
  32. Erin M Klitzke “Epsilon: Broken Stars” www.embklitzke.com
  33. Paul Rice “Getting Well for the First Time” http://gettingwellforthefirsttime.wordpress.com
  34. J Monkeys “The Cordovan Vault” http://secretsof7scribes.wordpress.com/
  35. Sharon Gerlach “Office Politics” http://sharongerlach.wordpress.com
  36. Michael E Mustizer “The Seven Isaacs” www.michaelmustizer.com
  37. Shannon Muir “The Heart’s Duty” http://shannonmuir.wordpress.com/
  38. Jennie Coughlin “Thrown Out: Stories from Exeter” http://jenniecoughlin.wordpress.com
  39. Amber Scott “Soul Search” http://amberscottbooks.com
  40. Terri Giuliano Long “In Leah’s Wake” http://www.tglong.com/blog/2011/11/blog-tour-de-troops/
  41. Anne Tibbets “The Beast Call” http://writeforcoffee.blogspot.com
  42. Tracy Rozzlynn “Verita” http://www.TracyRozzlynn.com
  43. Susan Salluce “Out of Breath” http://sipnsharewithsusan.com/
  44. Alison DeLuca “The Night Watchman Express” http://alisondeluca.blogspot.com/
  45. Delphine Pontvieux “ETA” http://missnyet.wordpress.com/
  46. Brian Jeffreys “Fall of the Terran Empire” http://brianjeffreys.blogspot.com/
  47. Mercy Loomis “Scent and Shadow” http://mercyloomis.blogspot.com/
  48. Dianne Venetta “Lust on the Rocks” http://www.diannevenetta.com
  49. D.M. Kenyon “The Lotus Blossom” www.blog.lotusblossombook.com
  50. Coral Russell “Amador Lockdown” http://alchemyofscrawl.wordpress.com/
  51. Lacey Weatherford “The Dark Rising” http://laceyweatherfordbooks.com

Free Book (Kindle) - The Wounded Heart

The Wounded Heart: Hope for Adult Victims of Childhood Sexual Abuse, by Dan B Allender Ph.D., is free in the Kindle store, courtesy of Christian publisher NavPress.
Book Description
Sexual abuse knows no religious or social boundaries. The Wounded Heart is an intensely personal and specific look at this form of abuse. Dr. Allender explores the secret lament of the soul damaged by sexual abuse and lays hold of the hope buried there by the One whose unstained image we all bear. Includes information about false memory issues.

From the Back Cover
You may think you don't know anyone who has been sexually abused, especially if most of your friends and acquaintances are Christians. But the statistics indicate otherwise. The Wounded Heart is an intensely personal and specific look at this most "soul deadening" form of abuse. Personal because it may be affecting you, your spouse, a close friend or neighbor, or someone you know well at church; and specific because it goes well beyond the general issues and solutions discussed in other books.

Dr. Allender's book reaches deep into the wounded heart of someone you know, exploring the secret lament of the soul damaged by sexual abuse and laying hold of the hope buried there by the One whose unstained image we all bear.

Free Book (Kindle/nook) - Your Brain and Business

Your Brain and Business: The Neuroscience of Great Leaders, by Srinivasan S. Pillay, is a repeat freebie in the Kindle store and from Barnes and Noble, courtesy of FT Press.
Book Description
What does neuroscience have to do with leadership? Everything.

Recent advances in brain science and neuroimaging can dramatically improve the way leaders work with colleagues to drive successful change. As the brain is increasingly examined in the context of personal and organizational development, remarkable insights are being uncovered: insights that are leading to powerful new strategies for improving business execution.

In Your Brain and Business, Harvard psychiatrist, brain-imaging researcher, and executive coach Srinivasan S. Pillay illuminates the rapidly emerging links between modern brain science and the corner office. He reveals powerful ways that neuroscientific insights can be used practically by today’s executives and presents new lessons for coaches who want to help their clients overcome common leadership problems.

Discover how leaders and coaches worldwide are already applying this knowledge to dramatically improve personal performance--and learn how you can do it, too.
  • How positive thinking impacts the business brain - Building on “strengths-based” approaches that encourage the brain to learn
  • Guiding leaders and managers to more effective relationships - Applying the fascinating neuroscience of social intelligence
  • Innovation, intuition, and impostors - Overcoming the intangible vulnerabilities in the brains of great leaders
  • Transforming the idea of change into execution - Clearing the pathways from thought to “action orientation” to real action
  • Coaching the executive brain - Specific interventions that target different brain regions and processes
Get the free book from Barnes & Noble.

Free Book (Kindle/nook) - Now You're Thinking!

Now You're Thinking!: Change Your Thinking...Revolutionize Your Career ... Transform Your Life, by Stewart Emery, Russ Hall, Heather Ishikawa and John Maketa, is free in the Kindle store and from Barnes and Noble, courtesy of FT Press.
Book Description
If you can change the way you think, you can change the world. That’s the theme of Now You’re Thinking! as it tells the story of how a 2-year old Iraqi girl’s life was saved through determination, courage, and critical thinking. The book begins with the heroic story of how a Marine battalion beat the odds to save this little girl, and ends with a model of critical thinking that will help you STOP and THINK to recognize your emotions, evaluate arguments, and draw conclusions to make better life decisions. This book also provides the opportunity for you to take the My Thinking Styles assessment for free to learn your natural thinking preferences, strengths, and biases. This short read will give you a real-life example of great thinking plus tons of resources to guide your further interest in effective thinking.

Living the good life and want to make it great? Desperate to give your career an “extreme makeover”? Either way, the changes you want start inside your own head, with the way you think.

This book is the blueprint you need to build greater success by teaching you breakthrough techniques for thinking far more effectively. That’s the secret of making better decisions: whether you’re working toward a promotion or considering refinancing your house. Some thinking processes simply work better than others, and this book teaches you the ones that are proven to work best.

The authors start with the extraordinary true story of Amenah, just two years old, dying in an Iraqi village and in desperate need of complicated open-heart surgery unavailable in her own country. The authors reveal the extraordinary thinking and courage that saved her life and show how you can use the same approaches to transform every aspect of yours.
Get the free book from Barnes & Noble.

Free Book (Kindle/nook) - The Truth About the New Rules of Business Writing

The Truth About the New Rules of Business Writing, by Natalie Canavor and Claire Meirowitz, is a repeat freebie in the Kindle store and from Barnes and Noble, courtesy of FT Press.
Book Description
Business writing that packs a punch: Make the most of your message to get what you want!
  • The truth about supercharging your business writing
  • The truth about writing directly, clearly, and convincingly
  • The truth about writing in today’s varied business formats
Simply the best thinking

THE TRUTH AND NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH

This book reveals 52 proven, bite-size, easy-to-use business writing techniques that work.
Get the free book from Barnes & Noble. Be careful if doing a search by title on your nook, as there are two editions and the other is full price.

Free Book (Kindle/nook) - Mobile DNA: Finding Treasure in Junk

Mobile DNA: Finding Treasure in Junk, by Haig H. Kazazian, is a repeat freebie in the Kindle store and from Barnes and Noble, courtesy of FT Press.
Book Description
In Mobile DNA, leading geneticist Haig Kazazian thoroughly reviews our current understanding of the substantial role mobile genetic elements play in genome and organism evolution and function. He offers an accessible intellectual history of mobile DNA, rich and insightful perspectives on how investigators ask and answer research questions, and his predictions about future developments and research directions for this active field.

Haig Kazazian reviews our current scientific understanding of mobile DNA and its role in the evolution and function of genomes and organisms, offering an in-depth portrait of the developing perspectives and research strategies pursued by the workers in his own laboratory. He presents an engaging history of the field, showing how advances have presented unexpected new questions, and how new tools and techniques have promoted further progress. Coverage includes: multiple types of mobile DNA; retrotransposition and other key concepts; important mobile DNA research advances in the human genome, mammals, and plants; mobile DNA’s role in increasing genome plasticity and diversity; and the roles of leading scientists in moving mobile DNA research forward. Kazazian concludes with informed reflections on the possible biological roles of mobile DNA, and his own current best guesses about how a number of the leading questions currently under active investigation will likely be answered.
Get the free book from Barnes & Noble.

Free Book (Kindle) - Business and Competitive Analysis Method [DE]

Business and Competitive Analysis Method (Kindle Main/DE), by Craig S. Fleisher and Babette E. Bensoussan (list price $72!!), is a repeat freebie on Kindle, but only for European customers, so far.
Book Description
The Definitive How-To Guide for Business and Competitive Analysis
  • Transform raw data into compelling, actionable business recommendations
  • Answer the questions executives ask–“What?” “So What?” and “Now What?”
  • Today’s 24 most valuable techniques: how to choose them, how to use them
  • For everyone who performs analysis: managers, consultants, functional specialists, and strategists
  • A completely new book by the authors of the popular Strategic and Competitive Analysis
Business success begins with deep clarity about your competition and your business environment. But, even as data gathering has improved dramatically, few business professionals know the state-of-the-art techniques for analyzing their data. Now there’s a comprehensive, immensely practical guide to today’s best tools and techniques for answering tough questions and making actionable recommendations.

Business and Competitive Analysis begins with end-to-end guidance on the analysis process, including defining problems, avoiding analytical pitfalls, choosing tools, and communicating results. Next, the authors offer detailed guides on 24 of today’s most valuable analysis models: techniques that have never been brought together in one book before.They offer in-depth, step-by-step guidance for using every technique–along with realistic assessments of strengths, weaknesses, feasibility, and business value.

You are flooded with data. This book will help you transform that data into actionable insights and recommendations that enterprise decision makers cannot and will not ignore. Craig S. Fleisher and Babette E. Bensoussan begin with a practical primer on the process and context of business and competitive analysis: how it works, how to avoid pitfalls, and how to communicate results. Next, they introduce their unique FAROUT method for choosing the right tools for each assignment. The authors then present 24 of today’s most valuable analysis methods.They cover “classic” techniques, such as McKinsey 7S and industry analysis, as well as emerging techniques from multiple disciplines:economics,corporate finance, sociology, anthropology, and the intelligence and futurist communities. For each, they present clear descriptions, background context, strategic rationales, strengths, weaknesses, step-by-step instructions, and references. The result is a book you can rely on to meet any analysis challenge, no matter how complex or novel.

Free Book (Kindle/nook) - Know What You Don't Know

Know What You Don't Know: How Great Leaders Prevent Problems Before They Happen, by Michael A. Roberto, is a repeat freebie in the Kindle store and from Barnes and Noble, courtesy of FT Press.
Book Description
In Know What You Don’t Know, best-selling author Michael Roberto shows leaders how to go beyond mere “problem solving” to uncover and address emerging problems while they’re still manageable—before they mushroom into disaster! Roberto first identifies the diverse, sometimes surprising reasons why problems typically fester in the shadows, ignored and unaddressed. Next, he systematically introduces seven powerful solutions. You’ll discover how to become a business “anthropologist,” observing how your employees, customers, and suppliers actually behave, not just how they’re “supposed” to behave. Roberto shows how and when to circumvent your gatekeepers to see crucial raw data...how to “connect the dots” among issues that seem unrelated, but are really signs of a deeper pattern...how to promote candor among front-line employees...encourage “useful” mistakes, and more. Along the way, Roberto offers powerful insights for overcoming the “isolation trap” so many senior executives face: the trap that can keep you assuming everything is fine, while your company’s problems are spiraling out of control!
Get the free book from Barnes & Noble. Be careful if doing a search by title on your nook, as there are two editions and the other is full price.

Free Short Stories by Kevin Hearne (Kindle) [AU]

Australian Kindlers can pick up three short stories by Kevin Hearne, meant as promotions for Iron Druid Chronicles series.