Why should I provide my email address?

Start saving money today with our FREE daily newsletter packed with the best FREE and bargain Kindle book deals. We will never share your email address!
Sign Up Now!

5 Novels For Just 99 Cents! Isaac Hooke’s Award-Winning The Forever Gate Compendium Edition (Forever Gate 1 – 5) – An Amazon Bestselling Science Fiction And Fantasy Serial

25 Rave Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

awardTHE FOREVER GATE is a five-part novel. There are two ways to enjoy THE FOREVER GATE. The first is to buy all five parts in sequence. The second is to buy the COMPENDIUM, which includes all five short novels and costs less than the total price of the individual works.

This is the money-saving COMPENDIUM edition.

THE FOREVER GATE originally started life as a 21,000 word experimental science fiction novella. In the first two weeks of its release, that novella sold 1,000 copies without any promotion whatsoever. What began as an experiment turned out to be something of a cult hit. Isaac Hooke decided to expand upon the concept presented in the novella, and the serial was born. Each volume consistently shot to the top of the Amazon short-story best-seller list. Soon, book reviewers who ordinarily don’t read indie works gave it rave reviews. People wrote fan fiction for it. On March 20, 2013, it won the Indie Book of the Day award. The serial quite literally developed a life of its own.

ABOUT THE FOREVER GATE:
3740 A.D. The ice age has immobilized the world. Colossal walls seal off the cities from the uninhabitable Outside. Humanlike entities called “gols” run society, and force the humans to wear collars that block the innate powers humankind has evolved.

What one man will do to save the woman he loves could destroy his world.

>>> THE FOREVER GATE combines elements of science fiction & fantasy to create a unique world entirely unlike anything you’ve seen before.

Reviews

“I’ve never read an indie author. Until now. So imagine my surprise when I found Isaac’s The Forever Gate was not only not sludge, it was pretty darn good.” – ScienceFiction-Lit.com

“I normally go for established authors.. this time, however, I got my hands on a short novel by indie author Isaac Hooke, called The Forever Gate, and I am very glad I did. I found myself immediately sucked in to the narrative. I actually enjoyed the story so much that I felt like giving it a bit of publicity.” – BookReviewsGuru.com

“The Forever Gate is a fast-paced, thoughtful, and extremely well-written foray into the F/SF genre. I highly recommend this book.” – WJ Davies, author of Binary Cycle

“Every chapter has something suspenseful happening, making the book very hard to put down, and Isaac’s writing style flows like few others. To top it all off, the editing was superb. I was never bored or disappointed.” – Jasper Scott, author of Dark Space

Watch Book Trailer

About The Author

Isaac Hooke is the author of THE FOREVER GATE, the Amazon #1 bestselling science fiction and fantasy serial. When Isaac isn’t writing, publishing, and blogging, he’s busy cycling and taking pictures in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He’s been writing since 1997, and he has a degree in Engineering Physics.

You can follow Isaac on Twitter @IsaacHooke and his website IsaacHooke.com.


Join our thousands of happy subscribers. It’s FREE!

Get Deep Discounts on Premium Bestsellers, Plus Free Books for Your Kindle! – Subscribe now http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

button_subscribe

BookGorilla-logo-small(1)

KND is Working Hard to Get You The Best Deals & Freebies Around! Check Out Today’s KND Kindle Free Book Alert for September 2– Nine Bestselling Freebies, Just For Today! Plus The Best Kindle Deals Anywhere … Don’t Miss Today’s Spotlight Freebie: Jackie Townsend’s Imperfect Pairings

Join our thousands of happy subscribers. It's FREE!

Get Deep Discounts on Premium Bestsellers, Plus Free Books for Your Kindle! – Subscribe now http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

button_subscribe

BookGorilla-logo-small(1)

But first, a word from ... Today's Sponsor
"Townsend writes lovingly of the Italian world in a love story about questioning of values and ideals."
Imperfect Pairings
by Jackie Townsend
4.1 stars - 14 reviews
Supports Us with Commissions Earned
Currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here's the set-up:
An encounter with an Italian leads a woman down a path of love and self discovery.

Smart, career driven Jamie had not intended to fall in love. And to a foreigner no less, an Italian who doesn't reveal his heritage at first. Jack is short for John, he tells her, but she soon discovers that John is short for Giovanni. Insanely handsome and intense but unreadable, Giovanni is a man of few words. When after two months together she accompanies him to his cousin s wedding in Italy, Jamie learns that he hasn't been back to the troubled family estate in ten years, but with one step upon the rich Italian soil covered in ancient vines, it's as if he never left. Suddenly his language is no longer her language, and Jamie is drawn inexplicably into an Italy that outsiders rarely see--a crumbling villa, an old family scandal, a tragic mother, an estranged father, and a host of spirited Italian cousins. Jack is finally forced to face the destiny he's been renouncing; and Jamie makes a rash decision, unaware that it will change her life forever.
One Reviewer Notes:
"Imperfect Pairings," by Jackie Townsend is a love story not just for romance lovers, but for everyone who has been in a relationship, as they all will be able to relate while enjoying an entertaining, fun read which provides also a profound message about our choices in life. "Imperfect Pairings" is definitely at the top of my 2013 list for best books I have read this year!
ReaderViews
About the Author
Jackie Townsend is the author of "Reel Life" and "Imperfect Pairings." She is a native of Southern California, and spends a lot of her time in places not her own. As the youngest of four children, she carries a strong sense of family with her to these places, often foreign, and writes about belonging (or not belonging), loss, and love. She lives in New York with her husband.

Follow her blog at jackietownsend.com. Jackie Townsend is the author of "Reel Life" and "Imperfect Pairings." She is a native of Southern California, and spends a lot of her time in places not her own. As the youngest of four children, she carries a strong sense of family with her to these places, often foreign, and writes about belonging (or not belonging), loss, and love. She lives in New York with her husband. Follow her blog at jackietownsend.com.
UK CUSTOMERS: Click on the title below to download
Imperfect Pairings

*  *  *

8 MORE FREEBIES – Just For Today!

Prices may change at any moment, so always check the price before you buy! This post is dated Monday, September 2, 2013, and the titles mentioned here may remain free only until midnight PST tonight.

Please note: References to prices on this website refer to prices on the main Amazon.com website for US customers. Prices will vary for readers located outside the US, and even for US customers, prices may change at any time. Always check the price on Amazon before making a purchase.

*  *  *

5.0 stars – 2 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Today when you factor in the interest on the national debt from past wars and total defense expenditures the United States spends almost 40% of its federal budget on the military. It accounts for over 46% of total world arms spending. Before World War II it spent almost nothing on defense and hardly anyone paid any income taxes. You can’t have big wars without big government. Such big expenditures are now threatening to harm the national economy. How did this situation come to be?

*  *  *

4.2 stars – 21 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Brilliant and beautiful Veronica Lane, M.D. finds herself the subject of a murder investigation after her patient is found poisoned in the hospital. When the only witness to the murder turns up dead and the police arrest her, Dr. Lane is forced to try to solve the case herself. With her reputation, her freedom, and possibly her life on the line, Dr. Lane hunts down the killer. Her only help: an underage hooker, a local reporter, and her handsome attorney.

*  *  *

4.0 stars – 73 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

*  *  *

Cooch

by Robert Cook

4.3 stars – 25 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Alejandro Mohammed Cuchulain, called Cooch or Alex, became a Marine at sixteen and a CIA special-operations trainee at 17. His father is a wheel-chair bound former Marine and Medal of Honor winner who gives Alex advice as to how to survive in a violent world. His mother is the daughter of a Bedouin sheikh who sends a young Alex off, during his summer breaks, to experience the Bedouin life. The combination of a very young start in learning the art and craft of violence, combined with a thirst for knowledge combine to help him to become both a noted designer and user of explosives and an expert in Islamic affairs. Violent, yet thoughtful, Cooch represents the best in fast-moving, popular thrillers.

*  *  *

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
17 Year old Kayleigh is on Vacation with her parents and her sister Rylie. They spend the whole summer at Myrtle Beach, SC. That is when she meets him…… All Kayleigh wants before Summer ends is one dance. Just one dance with him before she never gets to see him again. Will she ever get her dance? This book is a great love story for Teens and Young Adults Everywhere!!

*  *  *

Tale of the Toboggans

by Christian Schmidt

5.0 stars – 8 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
As a freshman in college, Christian Schmidt was diagnosed with Rhabdomyosarcoma, a form of cancer rare in adults. In this book, he takes us through his first year with cancer– the diagnosis, the aggressive chemo treatments, living with pain, the impact on his relationships with family and friends. Through it all, Christian never loses sight of his life’s purpose: to glorify God and spread the gospel. As he shares his account of those difficult days, Christian also shares the lessons and truths he learned about God’s grace and love. Christian shows us through his own story that it’s only when we “live weak” that God’s strength can be displayed through us.

*  *  *

4.5 stars – 37 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
The greatest dark wizard, long thought dead, has risen anew; in his wake marches the vast army of the Feral Brood. None could have foreseen the total evil set to descend upon Darkin.

*  *  *

Booker T: From Prison to Promise: Life Before the Squared Circle

by Booker T Huffman, Andrew William Wright

4.5 stars – 32 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
A spirited tale of redemption from a seemingly insurmountable life of tragedy and crime, this first autobiography of professional wrestler and TV commentator Booker T. Huffman details his life before celebrity status in the ring. Beginning with Booker T’s single-parent upbringing after the passing of his father, this powerful account reveals the gritty reality of his formative years—from the gruesome accident Booker T witnessed at the age of 13 that led to his mother’s death and his subsequent life of abject poverty as an orphan in urban Houston to years of reckless drug use, dealing, and violence that culminated in a five-year prison sentence for robbery.

*  *  *

Check out our Free Book Search Tool for a boatload of free books

or check here for the best deals today on Kindle!

100kindlebooksKDDeals

 

bookgorilla99cent

KND Freebies: The “wonderfully entertaining” HOLLYWOOD STORIES is featured in today’s Free Kindle Nation Shorts excerpt

#1 KINDLE STORE BESTSELLER
in Humor & Entertainment/Movies & Video
WINNER, 2012 Global Ebook Award
Entertainment and Performing Arts Non-Fiction
“A wild, fun ride through
tinsel town past and present!”

                              -Jan Wahl, KCBS radio & KRON-TVFull of funny moments and twist endings, Hollywood Stories is packed with wonderful short tales about an amazing, all-star cast of the legendary characters and icons from the world’s most fascinating, unpredictable industry — a treasure trove of silver screen nuggets that is sure to amuse and delight.Don’t miss it while it’s just $2.99 — that’s
70% off the regular price!
135 Rave Reviews
Or currently FREE for Amazon Prime Members Via the Kindle Lending Library
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Or check out the Audible.com version of Hollywood Stories: a Book about Celebrities, Movie Stars, Gossip, Directors, Famous People, History, and more!
in its Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged!
Here’s the set-up:

Just when you thought you’ve heard everything about Hollywood comes a totally original new book — a special blend of biography, history and lore.

Hollywood Stories is packed with wild, wonderful short tales about famous stars, movies, directors and many others who have been a part of the world’s most fascinating, unpredictable industry!

What makes the book unique is that the reader can go to any page and find a completely engaging and illuminating yarn. Sometimes people won’t realize that they are reading about The Three Stooges or Popeye the Sailor until they come to the end of the story. The Midwest Book Review says Hollywood Stories is, “packed from cover to cover with fascinating tales.”

A professional tour guide in Hollywood, Stephen Schochet has researched and told thousands of entertaining anecdotes for over twenty years. He is also the author and narrator of two audiobooks Tales of Hollywood and Fascinating Walt Disney. Tim Sika, host of the radio show Celluloid Dreams on KSJS in San Jose has called Stephen,” The best storyteller about Hollywood we have ever heard.”

5-star praise for Hollywood Stories:

Like a bowl of pistachio nuts
“…Each story is smartly written and a delight to read..told by a master story teller…the writer takes us behind the scenes…to reveal little quirks, bright remarks, banter between actors and in many cases, why a film was made and how. All of these little tidbits add so much to the enjoyment of a movie…”

Loved it!
“The stories in this book are so entertaining! I love reading about my favorite Hollywood stars, especially from the golden age of movies.”

an excerpt from

Hollywood Stories:
Celebrities, Movie Stars, Gossip, Directors,
Famous People, History and more!

by Stephen Schochet

The Universal Maniac

    In 1999, an Australian gentleman told me about an interesting experience he and his family had at Universal Studios. They were on the backlot tour passing one of the theme park’s main attractions, the Bates Motel used in the 1960 horror classic Psycho, about a murderous young man named Norman Bates who loved his mother a little too much. As the guide gave out information about how director Alfred Hitchcock shot the picture, a tall man, dressed in drag and carrying a large knife, emerged from behind the old set and charged toward the tram. The narrator seemed to know nothing about the Norman Bates look-alike and clammed up completely. The make-believe killer wore such a convincing maniacal expression that some of the paying customers were frightened and screamed when he raised his weapon. Then the “fiend” pulled off his wig and he turned out to be comic Jim Carrey; The thirty-seven-year-old star was clowning around during a work break. After his laughing “victims” calmed down, Jim was happy to pose for pictures and sign autographs.

Extra: Jim Carrey’s second wife, actress Lauren Holley, once complained that her husband freaked her out because he couldn’t pass a mirror in their mansion without stopping, staring into it and making funny expressions for at least fifteen minutes. The same face-changing habit helped the Canadian-born comedian earn the praise of directors, adoration from his fans and millions of dollars.

Extra: Jim Carrey’s big break came in 1982 when fifty-two-year-old Mitzi Shore, the owner of the famed Comedy Store on the Sunset Strip, took a mother-like interest in his career. Three years earlier, Shore’s world was rocked when her unpaid performers went on strike. After all, if the waiters and the bartenders got wages, why not the talent? Why should Shore get rich while they made nothing? In Mitzi’s eyes, she gave comics a showcase to hone their acts and move on to bigger venues. She even provided some of them with free food and housing. How could they do this to her? It had been especially galling that thirty-two-year-old David Letterman, one of her favorites, had joined the work stoppers. When a car struck a disgruntled picketer who ended up in the hospital, Mitzi decided to settle up before someone got seriously hurt. (It turned out the “victim,” David Letterman’s three-years-younger friend and future late-night TV rival Jay Leno, faked his injuries in a successful attempt to end the conflict.) The whole ugly incident left a bitter taste in Shore’s mouth; she banned several of the labor dispute’s instigators from the club.

    When Carrey arrived on the scene, Mitzi thought the newcomer was someone special. He had an elastic body that seemed to be made of Silly Putty, was respectful and (unlike many of the other comics who the proprietor saw) looked good and always wore suits. Out of hundreds of comedians who auditioned at the Comedy Store each week, Shore gave Jim prime opportunities to perform nights at her club, publicly gushed over him and important people in Hollywood took notice.

Extra: A knife-wielding “Norman Bates” charging the tram later became a feature on some of the Universal Studios’ Tours.

The Lazy Super Dad

    Marlon Brando wanted to work as little as possible when he played Jor-El, the Kryptonian father, in the 1978 movie Superman. The fifty-three-year-old actor told the film’s producers that he only needed to do a voiceover and some object could stand in his place. After all, he would be part of an alien race; nobody knew what they looked like. Perhaps the extraterrestrial could appear as a green bagel. His bosses were both bemused and alarmed. They pointed out that Marlon’s son would look human and be played by an earthling. A grinning Brando agreed to show up on the set. For his ten minutes of screen time, the star made an estimated nineteen million dollars while not bothering to learn his lines. In his most dramatic scene, Marlon held his baby above his head, speculated on the child’s future, and then placed him on the space ship to escape the doomed planet. Brando hadn’t bothered to learn his lines; his dialogue was penned on the bottom of the super infant’s diaper.

Extra: The first Superman movies were low-budget serials made in 1948 starring Kirk Alyn (1910-1999) in the title role. The cheaply made Saturday Matinee cliffhangers got surprisingly good reviews. Alyn was only given credit for playing Clark Kent; the studio claimed that no actor was qualified to play the Last Son of Krypton so he’d appear as himself. One scene required the Man of Steel to rescue two would-be victims from a burning building. After the first take the director said, “That was great, Kirk. But could we do it again without you straining so much? I mean, you’re super strong, lifting a couple of humans should be easy.”

    Alyn, a body builder in real life, was indignant. “What do you expect? These people are heavy!”

     “People? Oh my goodness, baby, I’m sorry, we forgot to get you the dummies!”

Extra: In 1973, Marlon Brando (1924-2004) starred in the controversial and sex-charged drama Last Tango in Paris. This time around, the actor wrote some of his unmemorized lines on the bottom of his shoe, and in a few scenes hopped around awkwardly on one foot in order to read them.

Extra: Thirty-nine-year-old Jack Nicholson looked forward to working with the great Brando when they co-starred in the 1976 western, The Missouri Breaks. But Marlon, who eventually became Jack’s next-door neighbor in the Hollywood Hills, disappointed Nicholson by reading cue cards, thus not making eye contact in their shared scenes. Later Brando hired an assistant to read the dialogue out loud into a radio transmitter from Marlon’s trailer, which the actor could then hear through an earpiece. Once, Brando was about to speak his lines when the device inadvertently picked up a police broadcast. The confused performer came out of character. “Oh my God! There’s been a robbery at Woolworths.”

    The Wildest Guest

    Longtime staff at the old Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles had many candidates for the most outrageously behaved celebrity guest. There were the hammy Barrymore brothers who always tried to outdo one another; After the drunken John earned many stares for bringing his pet monkey in the hotel’s famed Moroccan-style club, the Coconut Grove, Lionel arrived there with seven chimps. Chaos erupted when the well-dressed guests chased the animals as they swung through the paper Mache trees. Then there was famed movie theater owner Sid Grauman who told Charlie Chaplin that he found a dead body in his hotel bed. The tramp fled in terror when Sid pulled back the blankets, not realizing he was looking at a wax dummy covered in ketchup. But it was hard to top the antics of actress Tallulah Bankhead who once called for room service, answered the door in the buff and told the bellboy no tip; She had nothing on her.

Marlene’s Wartime Regret

    Marlene Dietrich found her true calling entertaining the Allied troops in 1943. The forty-two-year-old actress, who never enjoyed making movies, got a crash course in how to talk to audiences. Nothing could be tougher or more fulfilling than performing in front of young men who might die in battle the next day. The Berlin-born American citizen overcame suspicions that she was actually an Axis spy, and was proud of spurning Hitler’s request to return to Germany. After World War II ended, she enjoyed being a lusty cabaret singer for many years and tried never to take herself too seriously. Marlene, whose long list of romances ranged from John Wayne to General Patton, once mentioned to her husband that she should have married Hitler back in the thirties, and then there would have been no war. She laughed when he agreed and stated that the Fuhrer would have killed himself much sooner.

Extra: In 1923, actress and singer Marlene Dietrich (1901-1992) married casting director Rudolph Sieber (1897-1976). They lived together for five years, had one daughter and never divorced. Rudolph took a mistress, while Marlene embarked on several notorious affairs. Dietrich stayed friends with the Roman Catholic Sieber till his death, and referred to him as the perfect husband.

Amadeus Was Here

    New York actor F. Murray Abraham didn’t mind spending months in Prague

When he starred in the 1984 Mozart fantasy Amadeus. In the Communist controlled city, you could turn the camera 360 degrees and it still looked like the eighteenth century. So what if there were a few inconveniences? One night a friend of Abraham’s, who was staying in the same building, was consumed with searching the actor’s apartment for electronic listening devices. F. Murray, who would win an Oscar for his performance as Mozart’s obsessed rival Salieri, couldn’t care less if the secret police heard them, and just wanted to go to dinner. But when his buddy found a mysterious plate under a decorative rug, he exclaimed to Abraham, “I told you, man!” and attempted to disable the suspected bug by triumphantly wielding a butter knife to undo the screws. When they suddenly heard the loud crash of a chandelier hitting the floor of the room beneath them, the two shocked men then beat a hasty retreat to the nearest restaurant.

Who Cares if it isn’t Real?

The lavish 1984 production of Amadeus angered some classical music scholars with its portrayal of Wolfgang Mozart. The film’s depiction of the former child prodigy as a foul-mouthed juvenile was a stretch; in reality, Mozart enjoyed toilet humor but was too well bred to act that way in front of royalty.  And his supposed rival Salieri was a talented composer, not the jealous mediocrity displayed onscreen. There was no evidence to prove that he plotted Mozart’s demise. In 1791, the final year of his short thirty-five-year life, Wolfgang was hired to write a death requiem (not as shown in the movie by Salieri, but instead by a Viennese Count that passed off others’ work as his own). Some who defended the picture pointed out since it was narrated by a madman in an insane asylum, dramatic license was allowed. Amadeus won eight Oscars including Best Picture, and proved that historical accuracy was not necessary to achieve great cinema.

Extra: Shortly after Antonio Salieri (1750-1825) died, a rumor spread through Austria that the Italian composer had admitted to the murder of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1756-1791). The most widely accepted theory of Mozart’s demise was rheumatic fever, and no foul play was suspected at the time. The negative portrayal had begun during Wolfgang’s life when the Mozart family occasionally accused Salieri of using his influence with the Royal Court to stop Mozart from obtaining important posts. There was more evidence that Antonio admired Wolfgang and tried to help him. When Salieri was appointed Kapellmeister, or head music maker, in 1788, he revived Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro (1784). The comic opera, which had originally been banned in Vienna because it made fun of the aristocracy, went on to become one of the always-struggling-for-money Wolfgang’s most famous works. Salieri’s attending doctors and nurses later claimed that Antonio’s deathbed confession never happened. Yet the gossip about enmity between the two men persisted for centuries, and inspired fifty-three-year-old Peter Schaffer to write the play Amadeus in 1979.

The Three Stooges’ Pain

    In the early 1930s, when Moe Howard of The Three Stooges decided childlike violence would be their trademark, it caused decades of repercussions for both the comics and their followers. After appearing in some two hundred films, middle Stooge Larry Fine lost all feeling on one side of his face. Curly Howard, the junior member of the team, wore a disguise in public to avoid being kicked in the shins by fans. Shemp Howard, who left the act and came back after younger brother Curly suffered a stroke in 1946, almost got knocked out by a young actress that he criticized after several takes for being too ladylike with her punches. Moe led his partners through orchestrated mayhem aimed at adult movie audiences for twenty-five years. He never imagined that beginning in the late fifties, the Stooges shorts would constantly replay on TV in front of impressionable kids. A sentimental family man in real life, Moe traveled throughout the country to teach youngsters the techniques of harmless, two fingers-to-the-forehead eye poking.

Extra: One evening in the late 1920s, Shemp Howard (1895-1955) accused Larry Fine (1902-1975) of cheating at cards and poked him in the eyes. As Larry rolled on the floor writhing in pain, and Shemp apologized, Moe Howard (1897-1975) held onto his sides laughing. The eventual leader of The Three Stooges thought the incident was the funniest thing he’d ever seen, and incorporated similar violence into their act.

Extra: By the late 1930s, Jerome “Curly” Howard (1903-1952) had become the most popular Stooge. A skilled basketball player and ballroom dancer, Jerry’s athleticism came in handy for his energetic antics on the big screen. Unlike Moe, who learned his scripts to the letter, the childlike Curly was a spontaneous performer. One time during filming, the youngest Howard brother suddenly got down on the floor and spun like a top for a few minutes until he remembered his lines.

Walt Disney’s Daughters

    Walt Disney’s two daughters, Sharon and Diane, grew up sheltered from the limelight. The children had no images of Mickey Mouse around their home. Their father didn’t go to many parties, preferring to stay in after a long day of work. Sometimes he would playfully chase the youngsters upstairs, cackling like the evil peddler woman in Snow White. When they behaved badly, Walt would admonish them with a raised eyebrow; His stern demeanor inspired the character of the wise old owl; in the 1942 animated feature Bambi. As toddlers, the brainy Diane and beautiful Sharon stayed blissfully unaware that their parents worried about them being kidnapped and allowed no pictures of the sisters to be publicly circulated. Once in 1939, a curious classmate questioned six-year-old Diane about her family. She went home and said, “Daddy, you never told me you were that Walt Disney,” and asked him for an autograph.

Extra: Disney came up with Mickey Mouse in 1927 to replace Oswald the Lucky Rabbit, one of Walt’s earlier characters, which he hadn’t copyrighted and lost to Universal Studios. The young filmmaker made sure that from then on, he owned everything he created. Some on Disney’s staff thought that he was like an overprotective father when it came to his favorite rodent. Never one to hold grudges, Walt had given Woody Woodpecker artist Walter Lantz (1899-1994) his blessing to draw the Oswald shorts, but it still killed Disney to see the cartoon bunny at another studio. In 2006, forty years after Walt passed on, Universal now merged with NBC, began showing NFL football on Sunday nights. To obtain the services of sixty-two-year-old broadcaster Al Michaels, still under contract to Disney-owned ABC, Universal transferred ownership of the Lucky Rabbit back to its original company. The trade thrilled Walt’s seventy-three-year-old daughter Diane to no end.

Goldwyn’s Conclusion

    After a bad preview for the 1947 Christmas film The Bishop’s Wife, producer Sam Goldwyn hired writers Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett to fix it up. The movie, about an angel who rescues the marriage of a neglectful man of the cloth, had left Goldwyn feeling frustrated by his actors. Cary Grant was giving a lackluster performance as the spirit, leading lady Loretta Young was complaining about her dowdy costumes and David Niven, playing the bishop, wanted Grant’s role. Over one weekend, the two script doctors worked their magic and saved the picture. Due to potential tax problems, the two scribes decided not to accept any payment for their work. At a lunch meeting with the grateful Goldwyn, Wilder and Brackett told him that they had come to the conclusion there should be no fee.           “That’s amazing!” said the smiling mogul. “I have come to the same conclusion.”

    Who Won the Race?

    Writer/director Billy Wilder liked to mess with producer Samuel Goldwyn’s head. The Austrian-born Wilder, who had fled Europe when Hitler rose to power, respected how the former glove salesman from Poland had good taste in stories, even though Sam hardly ever read anything. One time Wilder pitched the mogul a screen idea about Nijinsky, the famous Russian ballet dancer. Goldwyn was dubious, Wilder persisted; the story had great cinematic possibilities. As a young man, Nijinsky danced for the Bolshoi and received international acclaim. Then he met the great love of his life, was rejected, ended up in an insane asylum and thought he was a horse. Goldwyn stared daggers at him. Sam didn’t just fall off the turnip truck. The public would never pay to see something so negative.

    “Don’t worry, Sam, it has a happy ending.”

     Goldwyn asked what could possibly be happy about a man who believes he’s

a horse.

    “He wins the Kentucky Derby!”

Bette’s Resentment

Thirty-year-old Bette Davis deeply resented William Wyler when he directed her in the 1938 drama Jezebel. The New England-born Davis relished the challenge of playing a duplicitous Southern belle in the 1850s. But why did the older-by-six-years Wyler humiliate her in front of the crew, demanding that she do constant retakes? Didn’t this arrogant man realize she was now a big enough star to have him fired? When Davis complained that the filmmaker never complimented her work, he sarcastically kept saying her acting was marvelous until she begged him to stop. Despite coming down with bronchitis and throwing several hysterical fits on the set, Bette won the Oscar for Jezebel, which she said was the proudest moment of her career. She praised Wyler for getting a great performance out of her, and later acknowledged what everyone at the studio already knew; Throughout the production, she and Willy had engaged in a torrid love affair.

Extra: Bette Davis (1908-1989) met her fourth and final husband Gary Merrill (1915-1990) on the set of All About Eve (1950). She would later say that he was a tough guy, but none of her spouses were macho enough to be Mr. Bette Davis. When they divorced in 1960, a tearful Davis told a judge that the couple had gotten into a fight while driving through Connecticut. Merrill had stopped the car, picked her up and thrown her out. She had landed face first in a snowdrift. “I might be there still, if I hadn’t been rescued by a local farmer.” Merrill stood up and said angrily, “Your honor, you’re not going to believe this malarkey, are you? I never threw Bette out of the car in Connecticut. It was

Vermont where I threw her out!”

    Shortly afterward, a much calmer Bette stood out on the courthouse steps, brandishing a long cigarette holder as she spoke with the press. She was asked if she’d ever marry again. “Well, gentlemen, it’s tough with my career and all, but never say never. I do however have three conditions.” She took a puff from her cigarette. “First he must have at least fifteen million dollars. Second, he must immediately sign half of it over to me. And finally,” she paused for dramatic effect, “he must promise to be dead within the year!”

    Her criteria were never met.

Shatner Aged Well

    William Shatner resisted producer Harve Bennett’s pleas that he let go of his leading-man image for the 1982 science fiction film Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. The fifty-one-year-old actor was full of ideas that Bennett found objectionable. In the scene involving the death of Mr. Spock, played by Leonard Nimoy, Shatner proposed that the extraterrestrial first officer should not be seen on camera; They should just show Bill as Admiral Kirk reacting to the loss. And why did the story have to focus on the aging former starship captain having a grown-up son? Bennett pointed out that some great film actors got older on screen. Who? “Well, uh, Spencer Tracy. You remind me of him.” Shatner smiled, backed off his demands and gave a mostly fine, understated performance. Later, Bennett found out that he lucked out with his answer;  Shatner had worked alongside the aging Spencer Tracy in the 1961 ensemble courtroom drama Judgment at Nuremberg, and totally idolized him.

Extra: Thirty-seven-year-old director Nicholas Mayer used different methods to guide both his hero and villain through the 1982 movie Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. Ricardo Montalbán (1920-2009), who played the genetically engineered super-bad guy Khan Noonien Singh, had initially been over the top when he delivered his dialogue. The nervous Mayer suggested to the twenty-five-years-older Ricardo that he’d tone it down; Khan was a madman, but many crazy people were soft-spoken and that made them even more dangerous. To his relief, Montalbán, who at the time was a huge TV star on Fantasy Island (1978-1984), was grateful for the input. The veteran actor displayed no ego and did exactly what his younger instructor asked of him. With William Shatner in the role of Khan’s sworn enemy Admiral James Kirk, Mayer’s approach was to let his leading man do several bombastic takes until he got tired and bored. Then finally Shatner would give the low key line reading that ended up in the finished film.

Vincent Price was of Two Minds

Actor Vincent Price was of two minds regarding his career in horror films. The Saint Louis-born Price, who was both a gourmet cook and art collector, always felt a bit embarrassed when he made low-budget chillers. On the other hand, appearing in creature features helped older stars stay popular with young audiences. Besides, they were a kick to make; Vincent enjoyed the creepy jobs much more than those stodgy Biblical epics where everyone was always on their best behavior. While working on the 1958 low-budget thriller The Fly, the forty-seven-year-old Price kept breaking into laughter and ruining takes when he looked at the cheap-looking human/insect. Vincent continued to make mischief after the movie was completed. One day two female teens enjoyed a matinee screening of The Fly. They screamed loudest at the end when a familiar face they had just watched on screen stuck his head in between theirs and asked, “So how did you like the show?”

Extra: Always in search of extra publicity, Vincent Price (1911-1993) once took the place of his own dummy likeness at the Hollywood Wax Museum. The horror star stood motionless, held a hypodermic syringe, waited patiently for unsuspecting people to walk by and then reached out and squirted them with water.

Who Cares About Double Indemnity?

    Barbara Stanwyck was unique among egotistical Hollywood actors in that she cared about the whole movie, not just her own part. In 1944, director Billy Wilder challenged Barbara to play against type in the crime-thriller Double Indemnity. She shone as a seductive villainess who convinced Fred MacMurray’s insurance salesman character to help murder her husband. When the film was completed, the two stars watched the final cut at Paramount Studios. Both had been worried that playing nasty characters hurt their images, but after the screening, they were giddy. Stanwyck, who would receive an Oscar nomination for her performance, remarked that the movie was wonderful. What did MacMurray think? “Oh, I don’t know how the movie is, but I’m great!”

Extra: In 1925, a housewife in Queens named Ruth Snyder convinced her husband to sign a huge life insurance policy. Then she teamed with her lover, a corset salesman named Judd Grey, to murder her spouse. They made several botched attempts before finally succeeding. After they were caught, the killer couple blamed each other; The jury believed both of them, which led to Snyder and Grey being sentenced to the electric chair. Their crime inspired author James Cain (1892-1977) to write the serial novel Double Indemnity in 1943, which a year later was turned into the classic film.

Extra: Barbara Stanwyck’s (1907-1990) mother died when she was two; her father abandoned her two years later. Her rough upbringing didn’t stop Barbara from having a hugely successful sixty-year acting career in movies, stage and television. The twice-divorced Brooklynite was loved for her kindness and respected for her demanding professionalism. Best known to later audiences for playing the tough matriarch, Victoria Barkley, on the 1965 TV western, The Big Valley, Barbara once had some advice for her co-star Linda Evans. “You need more presence.” The beautiful twenty-three-year-old Evans, who had leaned on the thirty-one-years-older Stanwyck emotionally since her real mother died, asked what she meant. “I’ll show you.”

    Linda was about to do a scene where her character, Audra Barkley, walked through a door. Right before the cameras rolled, Barbara kicked her small screen daughter in the rear; Evans came flying onto the set with a startled, wide-eyed expression.

    “Now that’s presence,” said the smiling Barbara after the director yelled cut.

    The two women remained close friends for the rest of Stanwyck’s life.

The Kirk Spock Feud

    William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy did not always get along when they played Captain Kirk and Mister Spock in the 1966 TV series Star Trek. Producer Gene Roddenberry was continuously lobbied by Shatner to make Kirk equal to the Vulcan scientist as a problem solver, resulting in extra dialogue for the Captain. Nimoy responded by stealing scenes with his reactions. He would lift an eyebrow, give his superior officer a quizzical look and offer one-word replies such as, “Fascinating.” At one point, the two actors cornered Roddenberry and demanded to know who the star was. Frustrated by their pettiness, Gene instructed the show’s writers to make Spock and Kirk buddies, which helped ease the tension. Always linked together in the public’s mind, Shatner and Nimoy enjoyed a long fruitful relationship and made lots of extra cash by parodying their feud.

Extra: Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry (1921-1991) served as a Los Angeles Police Sergeant under Chief William Parker (1902-1966). Parker had taken over what was perceived to be a very corrupt force in 1950 and restored public confidence. William instructed his underlings to cooperate with the makers of the TV program Dragnet (1951-1959). Based on factual cases, the show put the hard-working Los Angeles officers in a heroic light. Parker also assigned his men the use of more patrol cars. He reasoned that not walking a beat would expose the troops to less temptation. It was William Parker who coined the phrase, “Thin Blue Line,” meaning only that law enforcement stood in between civilization and anarchy. Respect for the LAPD greatly improved due to William’s leadership, but some critics pointed out that there were incidents of police brutality under his watch. The taciturn head cop lamented that as long he was only able to hire human beings, there would be problems. Ten years after Sergeant Roddenberry left the force in 1956, the writer partially modeled the very logical, half-alien Mr. Spock on his quiet, efficient former boss.

Extra: In the 1934 comic mystery The Thin Man, William Powell (1892-1984) and Myrna Loy (1905-1993) starred as Nick and Nora Charles. The sophisticated couple delivered witty banter and drank heavily while catching killers. The retired detective and wife formula was hugely successful and led to five sequels. Audiences didn’t mind that “The Thin Man” was actually the lead suspect in the first movie and not Nick. The two actors got along well, but Powell occasionally complained that the scripts favored Loy. The leading man was often required to recite long pieces of dialogue that explained the case. His onscreen wife stood eying him with a quizzical expression, as she stroked their pet terrier. Then Myrna would steal the scenes with one-word replies like, “Really!” Some who observed the Kirk Spock byplay on the Star Trek set thought that William Shatner could identify with Powell’s plight.

Extra: Thirty-five-old William Shatner was told that he was going to be the star of Star Trek TV series (1966-1969), but the fans had other ideas. Leonard Nimoy as Mr. Spock, a character who the network originally wanted eliminated from the show due to his devil-like appearance, got more viewer mail. One day Shatner arrived in the make-up room to find a Life Magazine photographer there to record the application of Nimoy’s ears. Shatner, who wanted no one outside the Star Trek family to see his cosmetic secrets, announced from then on his own make-up would be done in his trailer and left. The fictional captain’s feelings were quickly made known; Shortly afterward, someone from the front office ordered the picture taker to leave. A furious Nimoy confronted a very defensive Shatner in what was the first of several arguments between the two of them.

Extra: When Gene Roddenberry was asked by his two main actors who was the star of the show, he chose Shatner. One of the reasons may have been that the producer resented Nimoy’s demands for a raise at a time when Star Trek, a very expensive TV program to produce, was losing money.

Extra: Immediately after Star Trek was canceled in 1969, Leonard Nimoy was a hot commodity. He joined the cast of the TV espionage show Mission Impossible (1966-1973) and made a fortune in real estate. Meanwhile, broke, divorced and unemployed, the Canadian-born William Shatner ended up living in a mobile home with his Doberman.

Verbal Shoot Out at Harvard Square

At high noon on a cold November day in 1974, sixty-seven-year-old John Wayne faced off with the staff of the Harvard Lampoon on the famous campus in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The students had issued their challenge by calling the beloved American icon a fraud. Wayne, who had his new movie McQ to promote, responded by saying he would be happy to show his film in the pseudo-intellectual swamps of Harvard Square. After the screening, without writers, the former USC footballer delivered a classic performance. When one smart young man asked where he got his phony toupee, Wayne insisted the hair was real. It was not his, but it was real. The appreciative underclassmen loved him and after the Q and A session, they all sat down to dinner. Later Wayne, who was suffering greatly from both gout and the after effects of lung cancer (sadly the Duke only had five years to live), said that day at Harvard was the best time he ever had.

… Continued…

Download the entire book now to continue reading on Kindle!

Hollywood Stories
by Stephen Schochet
135 rave reviews!
Special Kindle Price: $2.99!
(Regular price $9.99 –
deal ends 9/4/13)

Just 99 Cents For a Great Read From Cozy Cat Press: Murder In The Round (A Pamela Barnes Acoustic Mystery) by Patricia Rockwell & Here’s A Free Sample To Get You Started!

9 Rave Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

Finalist in Chanticleer Book Review’s “Mystery and Mayhem” Awards competition.

A night out with her husband to watch her best friend perform in a local community theater “in-the-round” production surely shouldn’t be cause for amateur sleuth Pamela Barnes to use any of her acoustic detecting skills. But when one of the actresses collapses on stage and dies, Pamela finds herself in the thick of things. The recorder in her purse making an audio copy of the performance for another friend who couldn’t attend, may now prove important when it’s determined that the victim was poisoned. Do the sounds on the recording hold any clues to the identity of the murderer? It looks like Pamela is on the sound trail again, and she––and her pals in the Pyschology Department at Grace University––will not stop until they find the person who committed this murder in the round.

5-Star Amazon Reviews

“I’ve read all of the acoustic mysteries by Patricia Rockwell and I’m just fascinated with the work of her main character, Pamela Barnes. Murder in the Round is a great book and recommend it to everyone that likes something out of the ordinary and a good clean read. Can’t wait for the next one!”

“This is a great story in so many ways. Plot is totally believable. The story grabbed me right from the beginning. Characters are true to life and you can relate with them well. Pamela Barnes and her husband Rocky are such a great pair… and he cooks! The style of writing reminds me of Poirot or Jessica Fletcher in that this is a good, clean, mystery.”

About The Author

Patricia Rockwell is the author of the Pamela Barnes acoustic mystery series. This amateur sleuth solves crimes using her knowledge of sound. The series includes SOUNDS OF MURDER, FM FOR MURDER, VOICE MAIL MURDER, STUMP SPEECH MURDER, and MURDER IN THE ROUND. Her new series, Essie Cobb senior sleuth, features a 90-year-old assisted living facility resident who solves mysteries. The books in this series include BINGOED, PAPOOSED, VALENTINED, and GHOSTED.

Dr. Rockwell has spent most of her life teaching. From small liberal arts colleges to large regional research universities–and even a brief stint in a high school, her background in education is extensive. She has taught virtually everything related to Communication–from a fine arts speech-theatre orientation to more recently a social science research approach. Her Bachelors’ and Masters’ degrees are from the University of Nebraska in Speech and her Ph.D. is from the University of Arizona in Communication. She was on the faculty at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette for thirteen years, retiring in 2007.

Her publications are extensive, with over 20 peer-reviewed articles in scholarly journals, several textbooks, and a research book on her major interest area of sarcasm, published by Edwin Mellen Press. In addition to publications, she has presented numerous papers at academic conferences and served for eight years as Editor of the Louisiana Communication Journal. Her research focuses primarily on several areas of communication: deception, sarcasm, and vocal cues.

She is presently living in Aurora, Illinois, with her husband Milt, also a retired educator. The couple has two adult children.

And here, in the comfort of your own browser, is your free sample of Murder In The Round by Patricia Rockwell:

Happy Labor Day! Here’s Your Kindle Daily Deals For Monday, September 2 – Bestsellers in All Genres, All Bargain Priced For a Limited Time! plus Claire Kent’s Nameless

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor

Nameless

by Claire Kent

4.1 stars – 46 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Buy it at $0.99 for a limited time only (regularly priced at $3.99).
They named it anything but love.

After a failed marriage to a domineering man, Erin refuses to be controlled by anything or anyone. That includes Seth, the father of her baby–a man who was supposed to be only a one-night-stand, a man who’s used to always getting his way.
There’s a reason that Seth Thomas, a successful defense attorney, is often referred to as the Bulldozer. If something needs to happen, he makes it happen. That includes being part of his baby’s life–even if he never expected to be a father, even if Erin doesn’t really trust him.

They’ll work out an arrangement in the best interest of their baby–and if they occasionally have sex, well, that’s just an added perk–but they both agree on one thing.

What they have will never be love.

5-Star Amazon Reviews

“The plot is new & realistic. The characters are written well & seem to be people I could actually know. I really enjoyed this book (even read it twice)!”

Beautiful prose, razor sharp dialogue, intelligently written story about two people I found myself caring for, believing in and cheering on… Seth and Erin will certainly not be leaving my thoughts anytime soon!

*  *  *

Never miss another great sale again – Free and Bargain eBooks & Apps delivered straight to your email everyday! Subscribe now! http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

BookGorilla-logo-small

*  *  *

Each day’s Kindle Daily Deal is sponsored by one paid title on Kindle Nation. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.

and now … Today’s Kindle Daily Deal!

Click on the image below

Screen Shot 2013-09-02 at 7.15.15 AM

Bestselling Kindle Titles – All $1.99 or Less! Get The Hottest Deals on eBooks & Apps on BookGorilla Now!

Join our thousands of happy subscribers. It’s FREE!

Get Deep Discounts on Premium Bestsellers, Plus Free Books for Your Kindle! – Subscribe now http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

button_subscribe

BookGorilla-logo-small(1)


81% overnight price drop on this Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winner!

THE SHIPPING NEWS: A Novel

This darkly comic, wonderfully inventive work, winner of the 1993 National Book Award, transforms the lore of Newfoundland–including shipwrecks, nautical knot-tying, horrid weather and family legend–into brilliant literary art.

Today’s Bargain Price: $1.99

Everyday Price: $10.38
Deal Ends: 9/30/2013

Save 90% today on a sensual journey into an erotic world few women dare to enter . . .

LIP SERVICE: A Novel

When a writing job at a sex therapy clinic exposes her to the world of phone sex, Julia glimpses a world that stirs her erotic fantasies but threatens her carefully constructed reality. As she explores her connections to the men she knows and several she will never meet, she confronts evil, perversity, and her own passions.

Today’s Bargain Price: $0.99

Everyday Price: 9.73
Deal Ends: 9/1/2013

New BEST PRICE EVER!
Price reduced 79% overnight on this PD James favorite! UNNATURAL CAUSES
A famous mystery writer is found dead at the bottom of a dinghy, with both hands chopped off at the wrists. Superintendent Adam Dalgliesh, with help from his remarkable Aunt Jane, must discover who typed the writer’s death sentence before the plot takes another murderous turn.

Today’s Bargain Price: $1.99

Everyday Price: $9.73
Deal Ends: 9/30/2013

Price cut 60% overnight! The deal lasts a month, but the story will stay with you forever

The Color of Heaven

“A box of tissues should be included in the purchase price of this book…. I finished THE COLOR OF HEAVEN in a matter of hours, but I’ve no doubt the read and the lessons imparted through Sophie’s story will stay with me… probably forever. An incredibly poignant and unbelievably gripping novel…” -Chris at Romance Junkies

Today’s Bargain Price: $1.99

Everyday Price: $4.99
Deal Ends: 9/30/2013

Want More? Free and Bargain Quality eBooks delivered straight to your email everyday – Subscribe nowhttp://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

button_subscribe

Kindle Free Book Alert for September 1 – Six Bestselling Freebies, Just For Today! Plus The Best Kindle Deals Anywhere … Don’t Miss Today’s Spotlight Freebie: Lucy Monroe’s The Shy Bride

Join our thousands of happy subscribers. It's FREE!

Get Deep Discounts on Premium Bestsellers, Plus Free Books for Your Kindle! – Subscribe now http://www.bookgorilla.com/kcc

button_subscribe

BookGorilla-logo-small(1)

But first, a word from ... Today's Sponsor
This is one of the sweetest, most sincere love stories I've read in a long, long time.
The Shy Bride (Harlequin Presents)
by Lucy Monroe
4.4 stars - 23 reviews
Supports Us with Commissions Earned
Text-to-Speech: Enabled
Here's the set-up:
Thrust into the limelight, child star Cassandra timidly enchanted audiences night after night.... But when her parents died, Cass retreated into her own world--too shy to leave her home. Once a year she shares her musical passion by offering lessons in a charity auction.... This year, money talks. The winning bid: $100,000!

Enter Neo Stamos, arrogant Greek tycoon. He wants Cass with a burning desire, though he knows that, shy and sweet, she will need a gentle awakening.... But Neo's the master of seduction!
One Reviewer Notes:
I enjoyed reading "The shy bride" a lot, especially because it's different compared to most books by Harlequin. The story concentrates on the relationship between Neo and Cassandra without rushing through it. They get the chance to become friends and fall in love without any haste or drama and I really enjoyed this aspect of the book. The love story is really sweet and lovely and both Neo and Cassandra are great characters. I also enjoyed reading about Zephyr and I'm already excited for his book. So all in all I think "The Shy Bride" is a great and lovely book and once again Lucy Monroe made me feel happy through one of her books.
S.K.K.
About the Author
With more than 6 million copies of her books in print, USA Today bestseller Lucy Monroe has published more than 50 books and had her stories translated for sale in dozens of countries. While she writes several subgenres of romance (paranormal, historical, single title and short contemporary) for multiple publishers, all of her books are sexy, emotional and show that love will conquer all. She With more than 6 million copies of her books in print, USA Today bestseller Lucy Monroe has published more than 50 books and had her stories translated for sale in dozens of countries. While she writes several subgenres of romance (paranormal, historical, single title and short contemporary) for multiple publishers, all of her books are sexy, emotional and show that love will conquer all. She's a passionate devotee of romance and shares her love for the genre with her readers through her books and a policy of open communication. You can find Lucy on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/LucyMonroe.Romance) her blog (http://lucymonroeblog.blogspot.com), and her official website (http://lucymonroe.com).
UK CUSTOMERS: Click on the title below to download
The Shy Bride (Harlequin Presents)

*  *  *

5 MORE FREEBIES – Just For Today!

Prices may change at any moment, so always check the price before you buy! This post is dated Sunday, September 1, 2013, and the titles mentioned here may remain free only until midnight PST tonight.

Please note: References to prices on this website refer to prices on the main Amazon.com website for US customers. Prices will vary for readers located outside the US, and even for US customers, prices may change at any time. Always check the price on Amazon before making a purchase.

*  *  *

Here’s the set-up:

‘Delivering my first baby is a memory that will stay with me forever. Just feeling the warmth of a newborn head in your hands, that new life, there’s honestly nothing like it… I’ve since brought more than 2,200 babies into the world, and I still tingle with excitement every time.’

*  *  *

Here’s the set-up:
Today when you factor in the interest on the national debt from past wars and total defense expenditures the United States spends almost 40% of its federal budget on the military. It accounts for over 46% of total world arms spending. Before World War II it spent almost nothing on defense and hardly anyone paid any income taxes. You can’t have big wars without big government. Such big expenditures are now threatening to harm the national economy. How did this situation come to be?

*  *  *

4.8 stars – 4 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
The day isn’t going very well for Seth. The Jackal, his personal tormenter, has discovered shelter 17, one of Seth’s hideaways at Stony Brook Middle School. Fleeing into a neighboring park, Seth somehow steps into another world entirely, where, in addition to losing himself, he also manages to lose his shadow.

*  *  *

4.2 stars – 26 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
By the author of Hidden in Paris, a playful cookbook filled with step-by-step recipes of the kinds of meals French people really prepare and eat at home.

*  *  *

How to Find Inner Peace

by Tanya Guerrier

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

This is a quick and easy read that is sure to comfort your soul. In this book, you will learn what TAG is and how you can use it effectively in your life to find inner peace. This book will guide you in a gentle way to discovering peace that comes from the Lord. You will learn practical tips and strategies that you can apply in your daily life to enhance peaceful feelings. Begin your journey of peace today!

*  *  *

Check out our Free Book Search Tool for a boatload of free books

or check here for the best deals today on Kindle!

100kindlebooksKDDeals

 

bookgorilla99cent