Archive

Archive for November, 2011

Bargain Alert! A Best of 2011 Amazon Editors’ Pick – $0.99 Kindle Apps Sale!

November 28, 2011 Leave a comment

So, those of you with brand-new Kindles, welcome! And it’s your lucky day, since Amazon has all these lovely Kindle apps at $0.99 (for a limited time)! (Don’t forget to browse the Amazon CyberMonday Big Deal sale too!)

The A Best of 2011 Editors’ Pick Sale for Kindle Apps!

This title and 24 others comprise our editors’ picks for the Best Kindle Games & Active Content of 2011. Browse the full list. All are $0.99!

*


These apps have always been $0.99, so not really on sale but Amazon added them to the list too :)

*

Be sure to check out Amazon’s Popular Kindle Games & Active Content page for a review of all the games available! And if you want to see the apps as a bestseller list, check out the Bestsellers in Kindle Games & Active Content!

If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by RSS Or by Email.

Categories: Deals, Games Tags: , ,

Amazon UK Kindle Daily Deal! Agatha Raisin: As The Pig Turns (Agatha Raisin 22) by M.C. Beaton for £1.69!

November 28, 2011 Leave a comment

Hey, Amazon UK Kindlers, you get your own special Kindle Daily Deal too!

Each day we will unveil one book in the Kindle Daily Deal at a specially discounted price–for that day only. Deals go live at midnight and ends 23:59 the same day.

And the new deal is…

Agatha Raisin: As The Pig Turns (Agatha Raisin 22)‘ by M.C. Beaton from Robinson is now available at the specially discounted price of £1.69 on the UK Kindle site.

Book Description

The as ever eagerly awaited latest installment of Agatha Raisin.

Winter Parva, a traditional Cotswolds village next door to Carsely, has decided to throw a celebratory hog roast to mark the beginning of the winter holiday festivities and Agatha Raisin has arrived with friend and rival in the sleuthing business, Toni, to enjoy the merriment. But as the spit pig is carried towards the bed of fiery charcoal Agatha – and the rest of the village – realise that things aren’t as they seem… Very quickly it transpires that the spit pig is in fact Gary Beech, a policeman not much loved in Winter Parva. And although Agatha has every intention of leaving the affair to the police, she rapidly changes her mind when she finds out Gary’s ex-wife has hired Toni to investigate. Cantankerous and competitive as Agatha is, she has to now join the fray and try and solve the case herself!

*

If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by RSS Or by Email.

Bargain Alert for Cyber Monday! Kindle Books: The Big Deal SALE! Until 12/3

November 27, 2011 1 comment

So, who doesn’t LOVE a good sale? For Kindlers, Amazon has a super special The Big Deal SALE! Until 12/3! Books are discounted down to $0.99, $1.99, $2.99 and $3.99!

Kindle Books: The Big Deal

What’s “The Big Deal,” you say? We’re glad you asked… Hundreds of Kindle books are on sale for $0.99, $1.99, $2.99, and $3.99 through December 3, 2011.

Shop for yourself, or give Kindle books–delivered when you want–to anyone with an email address. (No Kindle required. Books can be read on Kindle or one of our free reading apps.) But hurry–these deals expire on December 3, 2011. Titles may have additional territory restrictions, and not all deals are available in all territories.

So, time to buy yourself a Gift Card (so you won’t get dozens upon dozens of $0.99 charges on your credit card) and start browsing!

How about I breakdown the discounts by publisher or by Bestseller list later on, so you won’t miss out on anything. But for now, just have fun browsing! Here’s some suggestions from Amazon – Browse all Big Deal Sale Books (by popularity), Mystery & Thrillers, Fiction (General), Romance, Biography & Memoir, Health, Mind & Body, Young Adult and Children’s Books.

*

If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by RSS Or by Email.

Categories: Deals, Kindle eBooks Tags: , ,

Today’s FREE eBooks for Download (November 27)

November 27, 2011 Leave a comment

So, how many of you have bought a Kindle OR if you haven’t bought a Kindle yet, whataya waiting for? Amazon has an all-new family : Kindle ($79), Kindle Touch ($99) / Kindle Touch 3G ($149), Kindle Keyboard ($99) / Kindle Keyboard 3G ($139), and a Kindle Fire ($199)! Or you can get the larger sized Graphite Kindle DX.

(If you don’t have a Kindle, don’t worry, you can still read the free books! Just download the Kindle for the PC, Kindle for the iPhone/iPod Touch, Kindle for the iPad, Kindle for BlackBerry or Kindle for Android!) And guess what, Kindle now supports library borrowing (US only)! (See Borrow Kindle Books from Your Local Library)

*Incidentally, for those curious about the latest Special Offers [** Note that you can now opt in on the Special offers on non-KSO Kindles!], the latest promo(s) are they get to “Save 50% on select Kindle covers at Amazon.com“, “Buy one of 100 Humor titles for $1” and “Save $10 on a $30 purchase of select makeup in the Beauty Store“!

Well, time to fill your Kindle with FREEBIES! p.s. For the bargain conscious – check out ALL my bargain posts HERE (I’ve been posting updated bargains per publisher)!

*If you want a direct Amazon link where you can see ALL the updated free books right now, be sure to bookmark this link! It will take you to a page that lists them in best-selling order*

Remembering Christmas‘ by Dan Walsh (Revell) is available for FREE download on the Amazon US Kindle site. Just click here to download. *Also free at Amazon UK and B&N.

* Note that another Dan Walsh book The Deepest Waters is currently discounted to $2.99 for US Kindle and B&N

Book Description

“…This bittersweet tale of families abandoned and rediscovered should appeal to fans of Richard Paul Evans.” — Library Journal

Rick Denton lives his life on his terms. He works hard, plays hard, and answers to no one. So when his mother calls on Thanksgiving weekend begging him to come home after his stepfather has a stroke, Rick is more than a little reluctant. He’s never liked Art and resents the man’s presence in his life, despite the fact that his own father abandoned the family when Rick was just twelve. When what was supposed to be just a couple days helping out at the family bookstore turns into weeks of cashing out old ladies and running off the homeless man who keep hanging about, Rick’s attitude sours even more.

Still, slowly but surely, the little bookstore and its quirky patrons–as well as the lovely young woman who works at his side each day–work their magic on him, revealing to Rick the truth about his family, his own life, and the true meaning of Christmas. With skillful storytelling, Dan Walsh creates a Christmas story will have readers remembering every good and perfect gift of Christmas.

*

Check out the other freebies after the jump!

Read more…

Kindle Daily Deal! Mother Night (Kurt Vonnegut series) by Kurt Vonnegut for $0.99!

November 27, 2011 Leave a comment

I like this new promo by Amazon! We get a special Kindle Daily Deal!

Each day we’re unveiling a new Kindle book at a specially discounted price. Check back daily to see what’s next. Deals go live at approximately 12:00 A.M., Pacific time.

ETA 2: Amazon has price matched the Nook deal for today, so Social Engineering: The Art of Human Hacking by Christopher Hadnagy now also $4.50!

ETA: FYI, other ebooks from RosettaBooks that are discounted! The Child in Time by Ian McEwan and Belinda Goes To Bath: A Novel of Regency England – Being the Second Volume of The Traveling Matchmaker (Travelling Matchmaker, Vol 2) by M.C. Beaton and Marion Chesney are both $2.99 for US Kindle!

And the new deal is…

Mother Night (Kurt Vonnegut series)‘ by Kurt Vonnegut from RosettaBooks is now available at the specially discounted price of $0.99 on the US Kindle site.

Book Description

Best known now by the Nick Nolte 1996 film of the same title, MOTHER NIGHT (1961) is a dazzling narrative of false or shifting identity. The odyssey of its protagonist, Howard Campbell, Jr. is a paradigm of conflicting loyalties, ambiguous commitment and personal compromise. Campbell is an American emigre in Germany at the time of Hitler’s ascension; he is married to a German, his relations with the Nazi regime are excellent and he agrees to spy for them and to become a broadcaster serving the regime but then, increasingly disaffected, becomes a double, then perhaps a triple-agent sending coded messages to the Allies. After the War he is tried for war crimes but is exonerated.

The novel is written in the form of a memoir as the exiled Campbell, indifferent to outcome, plots his suicide. The novel is a moral tale without a moral or, perhaps, according to Vonnegut, a tale with several morals. Vonnegut, a science fiction writer in early career, knew the science fiction community well and it is more or less accepted that the conflicted and indecipherable Howard Campbell is modeled upon John W. Campbell, Jr. (1910-1971), the great editor of Astounding and Analog whose decades long rightward drift led him to endorse George Wallace in 1968.

*

If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by RSS Or by Email.

Categories: Deals Tags: , ,

NOOK Daily Find! Social Engineering: The Art of Human Hacking by Christopher Hadnagy for $4.50!

November 27, 2011 Leave a comment

Well… Barnes & Noble has a new promo — the NOOK Daily Find: Today’s Great Book at a Great Price! So, Nook owners need not be envious of those with Kindles! ;)

And the new deal is…

Social Engineering: The Art of Human Hacking‘ by Christopher Hadnagy (Wiley) is now available at the specially discounted price of $4.50 on the B&N Nookbooks site. The US Kindle edition is $18.50, so hopefully Amazon will price match!

Book Description

The first book to reveal and dissect the technical aspect of many social engineering maneuvers

From elicitation, pretexting, influence and manipulation all aspects of social engineering are picked apart, discussed and explained by using real world examples, personal experience and the science behind them to unraveled the mystery in social engineering.

Kevin Mitnick—one of the most famous social engineers in the world—popularized the term “social engineering.” He explained that it is much easier to trick someone into revealing a password for a system than to exert the effort of hacking into the system. Mitnick claims that this social engineering tactic was the single-most effective method in his arsenal. This indispensable book examines a variety of maneuvers that are aimed at deceiving unsuspecting victims, while it also addresses ways to prevent social engineering threats.

  • Examines social engineering, the science of influencing a target to perform a desired task or divulge information
  • Arms you with invaluable information about the many methods of trickery that hackers use in order to gather information with the intent of executing identity theft, fraud, or gaining computer system access
  • Reveals vital steps for preventing social engineering threats

Social Engineering: The Art of Human Hacking does its part to prepare you against nefarious hackers—now you can do your part by putting to good use the critical information within its pages.

*

If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by RSS Or by Email.

Categories: Deals Tags: , ,

Amazon UK Kindle Daily Deal! Back of Beyond by C.J. Box for £0.99!

November 27, 2011 Leave a comment

Hey, Amazon UK Kindlers, you get your own special Kindle Daily Deal too!

Each day we will unveil one book in the Kindle Daily Deal at a specially discounted price–for that day only. Deals go live at midnight and ends 23:59 the same day.

And the new deal is…

Back of Beyond‘ by C.J. Box from Corvus is now available at the specially discounted price of £0.99 on the UK Kindle site. (The US Kindle edition is priced at $12.99.

Book Description

The Edgar® Award winning and New York Times bestselling author delivers a thriller about a troubled cop trying to save his son from a killer in Yellowstone.

Twilight falls on a cold, wet spring day in the mountains of Montana. A cabin smolders in the forest. In the remains of the kitchen, a table set for two; next door, the remains of a single body. Alerted by hikers, Detective Cody Hoyt is called to the scene. While a brilliant cop, Cody is also an alcoholic struggling with two months of sobriety and it doesn’t help that the body in the cabin is his AA sponsor Hank Winters. It looks like the suicide of a man who’s fallen off the wagon, but Cody knows Hank better than that. He’s convinced its foul play.

But after years of bad behavior directly related to his drinking, Cody has few friends left in the department. And when he shoots and wounds the county coroner in a botched stakeout he is suspended from duty. But Hank was one of the few friends Cody had left and he’s determined to find his killer, badge or no badge. Who was at Hank’s cabin? Data pulled from Hank’s fire-damaged hard drive leads Cody to a website running wilderness adventures deep into the most remote parts of Yellowstone National Park. Their big trip of the year has just left – a two-week horseback journey into the wild. The very same trip that Cody’s estranged teenage son, Justin, has signed up for.

Cody has no choice but to trek deep into the wild himself in pursuit of his son and the truth about Hank. In America’s greatest wilderness, Cody is on his own, he’s out of time, he’s in too deep, he’s in the Back of Beyond.

*

If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by RSS Or by Email.

Book Review – After the Funeral: A Hercule Poirot Mystery by Agatha Christie

November 27, 2011 Leave a comment

Book Description:

When Richard Abernethie, the master of Enderby Hall, dies his heirs assemble at the vast Victorian mansion to hear the reading of the will. It is then that Cora, Abernethie’s sister, comes out with an alarming proposal: “But he was murdered, wasn’t he?” The next day Cora is found brutally bludgeoned to death in her home.

None other than Belgian sleuth Hercule Poirot is summoned to Enderby in pursuit of the murderer. Suspects abound including a wayward nephew unlucky with women and horses, a favorite and seemingly blameless sister-in-law, two feuding nieces, a nosey housekeeper, and a disingenuous art collector.

Poirot must conjure all of his deductive powers in order to unmask the killer and his final conclusion is a brilliant and unexpected as ever. After the Funeral is classic Christie at her best.

*

So, after getting reacquainted with Agatha Christie‘s Miss Marple recently, I thought I’d touch base again with her great Belgian detective Hercule Poirot – a character I have admired since I was a kid :) I borrowed After the Funeral: A Hercule Poirot Mystery from the library as its one of Christie’s books that I don’t recall reading before. I guess there’s something to be said about a mystery book being just all about the mystery, since I did enjoy this one even with a practically retired Poirot not being a major player (he mostly just sits in a chair doing his heavy thinking).

After the Funeral is a clever little mystery, and Agatha Christie definitely kept me guessing until the big reveal. It’s written in the usual Christie style – she presents us with the case of the Abernethie family gathered together for the reading of patriarch Richard Abernethie’s will, and one of the heirs blurts out “But he was murdered, wasn’t he?”. Of course that nitwit ends up murdered herself and that’s when things get interesting. Virtually everyone present in the will-reading is a suspect (with strong motives and doubtful alibis), and Christie knows to throw her readers red-herrings right and left to confuse us. Like I said, I was really surprised when the identity of the murderer was revealed in the end (*I have to admit that it does take some suspension of disbelief as to how Poirot solves the case, and the solution does hinge on a peculiar aspect of the English upper class [Spoiler]).

This isn’t one of Christie’s best, but it’s an entertaining mystery (with Poirot’s “little grey cells” getting a good work-out). And I do love Christie’s way with the English language – writing stuff like: “Miss Gilchrist’s memory seemed to be almost wholly culinary.” So clever and elegant at the same time. Admittedly, I’m massively  non-objective about this book with all my Poirot-love, so I’m definitely reviewing this book with rose-colored glasses on.

After the Funeral: A Hercule Poirot Mystery by Agatha Christie (HarperCollins) is available on Amazon as a Kindle edition, Hardcover edition, Paperback edition, and Audible Audio Edition. *Also available at Amazon UK.

The eBook is also available at B&N, Kobo books, and Apple iBooks


For a second opinion – here’s some reviews of After the Funeral by other bloggers:


If you enjoyed this post, get free updates by RSS Or by Email.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 203 other followers