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!

You Can Apply for a Credit of $70 to $130 If You Bought a Kindle Up to 30 Days Before the Price Cuts

First, just in case you haven’t noticed, there have been three big Kindle price cuts Amazon in the past three weeks:

  • On June 21, the price of the latest-generation Kindle with the 6-inch display and global 3G wireless was reduced from $259 to $189. Order here for $189.
  • On July 1, Amazon introduced a new Kindle DX with a 9.7-inch display, global 3G wireless, and “50% better display contrast” in a graphite exterior casing at a price reduced from $489 to $379. Order here for $379.
  • Finally, over the holiday weekend Amazon resumed selling its remaining inventory of the 2nd-generation white Kindle DX with a 9.7-inch display and global 3G wireless at a price reduced from $489 to $359. This was the latest-generation Kindle DX until July 1. Order here for $359, or get a refurbished model for $299.99.

Naturally, recent Kindle buyers have been calling the Kindle switchboards by the hundreds in hopes of getting a credit or refund for part or all of the price difference. In the past, and in numerous cases reported to me by Kindle Nation citizens in the last week or so, Amazon has provided just such a credit within a 30-day window.

It’s definitely worth a call, and from within the U.S. you can reach a Kindle representative toll-free at 1-866-321-8851. International customers can reach Amazon at 1-206-266-2992.

We’ll always have your back here at Kindle Nation. If you’re thinking of buying a new Kindle at these great new prices, you can get our back and help defray the expenses of Kindle Nation Daily by using one of the links near the beginning of this post to order your new Kindle.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Saturday, July 10: Two New Suspense Pre-Orders from Bestselling HarperCollins Authors, Plus Garden Magic In Your Backyard! (Today’s Sponsor) and Over a Hundred Free Promotional Kindle Store Titles

It’s great to see how masterfully Soho Crime, Michael Genelin’s indie publisher, has parlayed The Magician’s Accomplice’s two days as a Kindle Store freebie into bestseller status as a Kindle paid book. It appears that well over 500 Kindle Nation citizens picked up this great read free before the price was reset at $9.99 yesterday, but with the book still at #2 in the Kindle Store paid listings, it is clear that it is still finding hundreds of buyers at the new price. For quality books, that’s how freebies ought to work, and of course they ought to be available to every author and publisher.

And I’m glad to see that our Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alerts continue to be sprinkled with interesting suspense listings, with two crime and suspense pre-orders from bestselling HarperCollins authors today….

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor

 
If you’re a backyard gardener, you’ll want to find out why reader Denise A. Klein wrote in her 5-star Kindle review of David Soper’s Garden Magic In Your Backyard! that “I particularly enjoy having my Kindle read this book aloud while I work in the garden!”
 
Another reader said “Reading David Soper is like having a good friend by your side in the garden. He keeps you entertained, chats comfortably and cracks a few jokes between the chores of digging to the right depth and feeding your plants a proper diet. His suggestions are gentle and good-natured (“Plant bulbs abundantly; you want displays, not samples”). His descriptions are vivid and accurate (“The bulb should feel like a good clove of garlic”). And he spins some fascinating history for you to read while waiting for your seedlings to grow. I’d be tempted to while away hours with his prose even if my garden consisted of no more than a window box in a sunless apartment.”
 
Click here to download Garden Magic In Your Backyard! (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title, and of course, we encourage you to support our sponsors. Some of these paid titles will be from our own Kindle Nation Daily press (an imprint of Harvard Perspectives Press), while others will be paid titles from other authors and publishers.

Authors, Publishers, Kindle Accessory Manufacturers:

Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information:

Click here to sponsor a Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert!

Free Listings! 

Here are our updated free promotional listings in the Kindle Store as of July 10:

Harper Collins Pre-Order for July 30, 2010 – Suspense
From Booklist: The author of the 1990s Simeon Grist series returns with a compelling new protagonist: American travel writer Poke Rafferty, who is out to right some serious wrongs on the predatory streets of Bangkok. While attempting to adopt a homeless girl, rescue a potentially murderous urchin known as Superman, and build a lasting relationship with the former bar girl he loves, Poke is pulled into two brutal mysteries. One involves a notorious Khmer Rouge torturer, the other a series of child-porn photos. As he doggedly plumbs these ghastly depths, Rafferty matures from a play-it-as-it-lays layabout into a man willing to meet his lover’s culture more than halfway and find his moral compass at a time when the victims can be as guilty as the murderers are innocent. The fact that the referenced pedophile photo series and Phnom Penh torture house both existed heightens the impact of a narrative that’s already deeply felt. If this opens a new series, Hallinan is off to a surefooted start with a supporting cast (including Poke’s precocious, pugnacious, almost-daughter Miaow) well worth getting to know.
Harper Collins Pre-Order for August 24, 2010 – Suspense
A hodgepodge hardcover debut in which two Native American medicine men, an Arizona lawman, a young widow and her son, and a Papago basket-weaver/wise woman are inexorably drawn into confrontation with the evil ohb, a university professor-turned- serial-killer, who upended their lives six years before when he tortured and murdered the basket-weaver’s granddaughter and then stage-managed a suicide/frame-up for his distraught accomplice Garrison Ladd. Now he’s stalking Ladd’s widow Diana and son Davy, but his old MO (biting off nipples) used on a new victim has set the sheriff’s department on his trail, while his malevolent spirit has energized the Papagos. There will be another murder, an attempted murder, dreams, emanations, and a near-fatal dog- poisoning before everyone converges on the Ladd house for a gruesome resolution. Disconcerting time shifts and a plethora of Papago parables (can anyone outdo Tony Hillerman?) fail to disguise the fact that this is nothing more than potboiler melodrama, with the hapless reader bombarded first by the lurid, then by the mystical. — Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

 

Here’s a list of the categories in today’s Free Book Alert:

Crime and Suspense
Samples
Memoir, Biography, Personal Story
Writing and Publishing
Children/Young Adult/Teen
Contemporary Fiction
Nonfiction/Leadership/Change/Reference/Essay

Christian Spirituality and Christian Fiction

Science Fiction and Fantasy

Romance 
Erotica
Gay and Lesbian 

Crime and Suspense

Harper Collins Pre-Order for July 30, 2010 – Suspense

Harper Collins Pre-Order for August 24, 2010 – Suspense

Tumor Chapter 1
Tumor Chapter 1

Memoir, Biography, Personal Story

Writing and Publishing
Publish on Amazon Kindle with the DigitalText Platform
Publish on Amazon Kindle with the Digital Text Platform

Children/Young Adult/Teen

The Lost Hero Chapter Sneak Peek

by Rick Riordan
Contemporary Fiction

The Hunters
The Hunters

Nonfiction/Business/Leadership/Change/Reference/Essay

 Sam Walton’s Way (FT Press Business Short)

What I Learned from Peter Drucker (FT Press Business Short)

Christian Spirituality and Christian Fiction

What Is the Gospel?
Highland Blessings
On Earth as It Is in Heaven: How the Lord

On Earth as It Is in Heaven: How the Lord’s Prayer Teaches Us to Pray More Effectively – Christian/Spirituality

The Heir

Scary Saturday, a Regular Weekly Feature of Free Kindle Nation Shorts. July 10: “The Shed” by Jack Kilborn/J.A. Konrath

 Welcome to Scary Saturday for July 10, 2010
For the past year our Free Kindle Nation Shorts program has been connecting thousands of Kindle readers with emerging and established writers, and we’re proud to have helped many writers of distinction climb the Kindle Store bestseller lists. One of those authors has been Joe Konrath, and it has been a lot of fun to watch such a talented storyteller become one of the most successful fiction writers in the Kindlesphere. Joe has also been a very important trailblazer in the world of writing and independent publishing, so I was especially pleased when he decided recently that he wanted to give something back to the citizens of Kindle Nation by providing the stories on which we are drawing to initiate a new Free Kindle Nation Shorts feature called “Scary Saturday.”
We’ll continue to showcase many other writers here at Free Kindle Nation Shorts, but on many coming Saturdays we’ll treat you to truckloads of terror with the horror fiction of J.A. “Joe” Konrath. We’ll also provide links to his current and coming Kindle books and we hope you’ll be brave enough to turn all the lights on and keep reading.
Check out the latest bestsellers by J.A. Konrath, just $2.99 in the Kindle Store!
or scroll to the end of the story to read more about Joe Konrath

*     *     *     *    * 

The Shed
a short story by Jack Kilborn, J.A. Konrath

Copyright © 2010 Joe Konrath and published here with his permission

Author’s note: Just about every horror mag in the world rejected this story. I’m not sure why. Sure, it’s a standard EC Comics supernatural comeuppance, but I think it’s fun. It eventually sold to Surreal Magazine.

-J.K.

*     *     *     *    * 

“That’s gotta be where the money is.”
Rory took one last hit off the Kool and flicked the butt into a copse of barren trees. The orange firefly trail arced, then died.
Phil shook his head. “Why the hell would he keep his money locked up in a backyard shed?”
“Because he’s a crazy old shit. Hasn’t left the house in thirty years.”
The night was cold and smelled like rotting leaves. They stood at the southern side of Old Man Loki’s property, just beyond a tall hedge with thorns like spikes. The estate butted up against the forest preserve on the east and Lake Fenris on the west. Due north was Fenris Road, a winding, private driveway that eventually connected with Interstate 10 about six miles up.
Phil peered through the bramble at the mansion. It rested, dark and quiet, a mountain of jutting dormers and odd angles. To Phil it looked like something that had been asleep for a long time.
“Even crazy people know about banks.”
Rory clamped a hand behind Phil’s head and tugged the smaller teen closer. “If it’s not money, then why the hell does he got that big lock and chain on it? To protect his lawnmower?”
Phil pulled away and glanced at the shed. It stood only a few dozen yards away, the size of a small garage. The roof was tar shingles, rain-worn to gray, and dead vines partially obscured the oversized padlock and chain hanging on the door.
“Doesn’t look like it’s been opened in a while.”
Rory grinned, his teeth blue in the moonlight. “All the more reason to open it now.”
It felt all wrong, but Phil followed Rory onto the estate grounds. A breeze cooled the sweat that had broken out on his neck. Rory pulled the crowbar from his belt and swung it at a particularly tall prickle-weed.
“Yard looks like shit. Can’t he pay someone to cut his goddamned grass?”
“Maybe he’s dead.” Phil chanced another look at the mansion. “No lights on.”
“We woulda heard about it.”
“Could be recent. Could be he just died, and no one found the body yet.”
Phil’s words bounced small and tinny in the open air. He felt a rush of exposure, as if Old Man Loki was sitting at one of the dark windows of his house and watching their every move.
“You turning chicken shit on me? Baby need his wittle bottle?”
“Shut up, Rory. What if he is dead?”
“Then he won’t mind us stealing his shit. Damn-will you check out the size of that lock!”
The padlock was almost as big as Phil’s head. An old-fashioned type with a key-shaped opening on its face, securing three lengths of thick, rusty chain which wrapped around the entire shed like packing tape.
“You gonna try to bust that with just a crowbar?”
“Won’t know until we try.” Rory raised the iron over his head, and Phil set his jaw and cringed at the oncoming sound.
The clang reverberated over the grounds like a ghost looking for someone to haunt.
“Sonuvabitch! First try!”
The lock hung open on a rusty hinge. Rory pulled it off and the chains fell to the ground in a tangle. Phil eyed the door. It was some kind of heavy wood, black as death. Next to the doorknob was a grimy brass plaque.
“Welcome,” Phil read.
“How about that shit? We’re invited.”
Rory laughed, but Phil felt a chill stronger than the night air. He’d heard stories about Old Man Loki. Stories of how he used to live in Europe, and how he hung around with that creepy Mr. Crowley guy Ozzy sang about.
Reflexively, Phil looked over his shoulder to see if anyone was watching.
There was a light on in the house.
“Shit! Rory, there’s…”
The light winked twice, then went off.
“There’s what, Phil?”
“A light. On the second floor.”
Rory pulled a face and made a show of squinting at the mansion. His mouth stretched open in horror, lips snicking back over years of dental neglect.
“Run, Phil! Jesus Christ! Run!”
Phil took off in a dead sprint, fighting to keep his bladder closed. He was forty yards away when he noticed Rory wasn’t next to him.
That’s when he heard his friend’s laughter.
Phil looked back over his shoulder and saw Rory holding his stomach, guffawing so loud that it sounded like a barking dog.
Phil felt his ears burn. He took his time walking back to the shed.
“You should have seen your face!” Rory had tears in his eyes.
“Shut up, Rory. That wasn’t funny.”
“I swear, you ran like that during football tryouts you woulda made the team.”
Phil turned away, shoving his hands in his pockets. “I wasn’t scared. You told me to run, so I did.”
“Okay, tough guy-prove you aren’t scared.” Rory pointed at the black door. “You go in first.”
Phil chewed his lower lip. If he didn’t go in, Rory would never let him forget it. The teasing would last for eternity.
Why the hell did he hang out with Rory anyway?
“I knew you were chicken.”
“Kiss my ass, Rory.”
Phil grasped the knob and pulled.
The massive door opened with a whisper, moving smoothly despite its weight. Warm, stale air enveloped Phil, and the sound of his own breathing echoed back at him.
So quiet.
Rory switched on the flashlight. The small beam played over four bare walls.
“It’s empty.”
“Shine the light on the floor.”
The cone of light jerked to the center of the room, bending over the edge of a large, round pit and disappearing into the darkness.
“What the hell is that?”
Rory crept up to the edge, holding his flashlight out in front of him like a sword. He peered down into the pit.
“Do you smell that?”
“Yeah. Rotten eggs. I think it’s coming from the hole.” 
Phil glanced over his shoulder again, taking a quick peek at the house.
The light was back on.
“Rory-”
“There’s a rusty ladder going down.”
“The light is-”
“Shh! Do you hear that?”
Both boys held their breath. There was a quick, rhythmic thumping, coming from deep within the pit.
Bump…bump…bump…bump…bump…
“What is that? Footsteps?”
…bump…bump…bump…bump…
“It’s getting louder.”
The sound quickened, like a Harley accelerating.
“I think something’s coming up the ladder.”
Phil decided he’d had enough. This was the part in the movie where the stupid kids got their guts ripped out, and he didn’t want to stick around for it. He spun on his heels and hauled ass for the entrance, just in time to see a very old man with a pulpy, misshapen face slam the door closed.
Phil grabbed for the knob and pushed, but the door held firm.
“He locked us in! Old Man Loki locked us in!”
Rory kept his focus on the pit. “I think I can see some…”
A black hairy thing sprang out of the hole and yanked Rory downward. The flashlight spun in the empty air for the briefest of seconds, and then fell into the pit after Rory, the light dimming until the room was drenched in pitch black.
Phil stood stock-still in the darkness.
A minute passed.
Five.
He heard whimpering, and realized it was his own.
This can’t be happening, he thought. Why was this happening?
Bump.
 A sound. Coming from the pit.
The thing was climbing the ladder.
Phil forced himself to back up until he was pressed against the door.
“Hailmaryfulofgracethelordiswithyou-”
…bump…bump…bump…bump…bump…
“-blessedartthouamong-”
The noise crescendoed, then stopped.
The silence was horrible.
Phil couldn’t see anything, but he could feel the presence of something large and warm coming towards him. Something that smelled like rotten eggs and wet dog.
He screamed, and kept screaming when it wrapped its prickly tentacles around his face, a thousand hooks digging in and pulling. Phil’s hands shot up to push the pain away, and similar barbs shot into his palms.
His screaming stopped when the barbs filled his open mouth.
Then, with a quick tug, Phil was dragged down into the pit.
There was a sensation of falling, skin burning and tearing away, consciousness blurring into a darkness as complete as the one that surrounded him.
And suddenly, Phil was watching a movie in his head. A shaky, black and white film of him and Rory breaking into Old Man Loki’s mansion. Rory had the crowbar, and they used it on Loki, breaking his bones, bashing his face, demanding his money. Old Man Loki moaning the whole time, “The shed! The shed!” Repeating it over and over, even when Rory jammed the crowbar down the old man’s throat.
The movie abruptly cut to Phil as a much older man, clad in an orange prison uniform. He was strapped to a chair, a guard swabbing electrolyte on his temples and his left leg. The switch was thrown and Phil’s blood began to boil within his veins, every nerve locked in agony.
Phil watched the prison doctor pronounce him dead, watched as his own soul left his body, transporting him to Loki’s estate.
A terrifying deja vu ensued as he viewed himself acting out the same scenario he’d experienced only moments ago. Breaking into the shed-the thing grabbing Rory-getting dragged into the pit-
When Phil finally caught up with himself, he discovered he was in a small, stone dungeon.
Next to him, a forty-year-old version of Rory was chained to a medieval torture rack, naked and stretched out until his shoulders had separated. His body was a haven of slithering, spiny worms, which burrowed underneath his skin.
“Hi, buddy.” Rory offered a bloody smile, his teeth filed down to exposed nerves. “Be nice to have some company.”
Phil remembered that Rory had been executed eight years prior.
“What’s going on? What happened to the shed?”
Rory whimpered, a worm tunneling into his ear. “Old Man Loki didn’t have no shed. That’s why we beat him to death. Kept saying it over and over, when we asked him where his money was.”
“But we just broke into the shed.”
The worm stitched out of Rory’s nose, trailing crimson mucus. “The shed is the doorway to this place. I remember breaking in, too. Right after I died.”
Phil squeezed his eyes shut. His temples still burned where the electrodes had been attached. But the memory of his own death dwarfed the fear he felt right now.
He opened his eyes and tried to bolt, panic surging through him. But, like Rory, he found himself tied to a rack. His eyes fell upon a fire pit, where a dozen branding irons glowed white.
A squat, hairy man entered the room. He had sharp horns sticking out of his head where ears would normally be, and his skin was a dull shade of crimson.
He picked up a hot iron and gave Phil a fanged grin.
“Welcome to eternity, Phil. Let’s get started.”
*     *     *     *    * 

Okay … turn the lights on and take a deep breath.

It’s going to be okay … until next week, on …
Scary Saturday 

From the Kindle Nation Mailbag: How to Access Kindle “Text-to-Speech” Audio, And Is Random House Beginning to Participate in Kindle Text-to-Speech?

Thanks to Kindle Nation citizen Barbara-Lee, who wrote in with a question about the Kindle’s text-to-speech

I have a question I hope you can answer.  Does every book I download come with audio?  If so, how do I access it?  If not, how do I get an audio version of the book when I order it?   I appreciate any help you may offer.

Barbara-Lee

Well, Barbara-Lee, it turns out you may have asked a timely question, and I’m glad to answer.

First, the audio feature that Amazon launched in February 2009 for the Kindle 2 and the Kindle DX is called text-to-speech. It does not come with every book you download, but you can always tell, before you purchase a Kindle book, by looking at the bulleted points just below the price, where it will say “Text-to-Speech: Enabled” or “Text-to-Speech: Not Enabled.” If a book does have text-to-speech enabled, just open the ebook from your home screen, press the “Aa” font key to the right of the spacebar on your Kindle keyboard, and use the 5-way to click on “turn on” next to “Text-to-Speech.” Once it is on, you can pause or resume by pressing the spacebar, and you can go to the same “Aa” screen to regulate the reading speed or select a male or female robotic voice.

I hope that helps.

But now that I’ve said that, I just noticed for the first time today that a long-time nonparticipant in the Text-to-Speech feature, Random House, is apparently beginning to participate. When Amazon launched the feature early in 2009 Random House was the most notable abstainer, causing a serious controversy that even included demonstrations outside its Manhattan headquarters. The Random House website made it clear that none of its titles would feature Text-to-Speech, much to the chagrin of many Kindle owners.

Perhaps I have missed something, but my curiosity was piqued this morning when I noticed that I was able to listen to Text-to-Speech of Elizabeth Edwards’ Resilience: The New Afterword, the short chapter added to the current version of her tell-some memoir, which is published by Random House imprint Broadway. However, the full-length version, Resilience: Reflections on the Burdens and Gifts of Facing Life’s Adversities, does not come with Text-to-Speech enabled.

However, that was enough to set me off on a minor research project when I should have been doing other things this afternoon, and I am happy to report something that certainly qualifies as news to me: about 5 to 10 percent of the newish, bestselling titles that I have been checking from Random House and its various imprints are showing “Text to Speech: Enabled.” Although 5 or 10 percent is far less than what we’d like to see, of course, perhaps it is the first trickle of a coming wave? Here are some of the Random House listings that are showing up with Text-to-Speech:

I’ve got an email in to Amazon, but I haven’t heard back from them about whether there’s anything interesting going on here. Meanwhile, I’d be interested to hear from anyone who has noticed anything similar, or noticed it long before me….

One last thing I noticed, and didn’t like: some of those Random House pre-order prices look ominously like agency model prices. Say it ain’t so, Random House!

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Friday, July 9: How to Send Thousands of Free Books to Your Kindle, Plus The Harvard Man (Today’s Sponsor) and Over a Hundred Free Promotional Kindle Store Titles

In addition to our regular listing of free promotional books, today we’ll focus on the easy steps involved in sending tens of thousands of free books to your Kindle …

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor

THE HARVARD MAN. He is brilliant, possessing intelligence most would classify as genius, and he has always believed he was destined for Harvard University.  However, there is a flaw.  He is also mentally unstable, a psychopath with violent tendencies.  Harvard has rejected his application.

Now, he is determined to exact revenge in sweeping strokes of violence that will display his brilliance and bring America’s most prestigious university to its academic knees.  If he can’t have Harvard, no one can!

For the month of July, Vellum Publishing Inc. is offering the riveting new thriller, THE HARVARD MAN by John Arthur Long, at a special introductory price of $2.99 for Kindle readers.

Click here to download THE HARVARD MAN (or a free sample) to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

All Vellum Publishing Inc. Kindle store offerings are formatted for easier reading and guaranteed to be reasonably priced at $7.99 or less.  Click here to see the entire Kindle catalog from Vellum Publishing.

Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title, and of course, we encourage you to support our sponsors. Some of these paid titles will be from our own Kindle Nation Daily press (an imprint of Harvard Perspectives Press), while others will be paid titles from other authors and publishers.

Authors, Publishers, Kindle Accessory Manufacturers:

Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information:

Sponsor a Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert!

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, Step-by-Step Tip: Amazon & Open Library Collaborate So You Can Send Tens of Thousands of Free eBooks Directly to Your Kindle via Whispernet

The process of sending any of tens of thousands of free classic books directly to your Kindle is easier and more seamless than ever thanks to a terrific new collaboration between Amazon and the Internet Archive’s “Open Library” project. As Kindle Nation readers know from this post last year, we were already able to download about two million Internet Archives titles to our computers for transfer via USB connection.

Now you can find any of tens of thousands of free ebooks on the “Open Library” website and send them directly and wirelessly to your Kindle. There are nearly half a million ebooks in the Open Library archive, but not all are available free).

The process is simple:

  • Search for a title at Open Library. You can search by author or subject, click on the “More search options” link near the upper right corner of the page, or use the very cool Publishing History tool to see all the accessible ebooks published in any year in the past two millennia.
  • Click on any title that is accompanied by a “Read” icon like the one shown at the right, and on the next page click on the “Send to Kindle” link for any edition of the title, as seen at the right of the screen shot below for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s early novel This Side of Paradise:

That click will take you directly to Amazon where, after you sign into your account (if necessary), Amazon will show you a screen like the one below to inform you about its Whispernet personal document policies and fees and prompt you to select the Kindle to which you want to send the title. Once you click “continue,” the free book should be visible on your Kindle home screen within 60 seconds.

Here are our updated free promotional listings in the Kindle Store as of July 9:
 

What Is the Gospel?

Here’s a list of the categories in today’s Free Book Alert:

Crime and Suspense
Samples
Memoir, Biography, Personal Story
Writing and Publishing
Children/Young Adult/Teen
Contemporary Fiction
Nonfiction/Leadership/Change/Reference/Essay

Christian Spirituality and Christian Fiction

Science Fiction and Fantasy

Romance 
Erotica
Gay and Lesbian 

Tumor Chapter 1
Tumor Chapter 1

Memoir, Biography, Personal Story

Writing and Publishing
Publish on Amazon Kindle with the DigitalText Platform
Publish on Amazon Kindle with the Digital Text Platform

Children/Young Adult/Teen

The Lost Hero Chapter Sneak Peek

by Rick Riordan
Contemporary Fiction

The Hunters
The Hunters

Nonfiction/Business/Leadership/Change/Reference/Essay

 Sam Walton’s Way (FT Press Business Short)

What I Learned from Peter Drucker (FT Press Business Short)

Christian Spirituality and Christian Fiction

What Is the Gospel?
Highland Blessings
On Earth as It Is in Heaven: How the Lord

On Earth as It Is in Heaven: How the Lord’s Prayer Teaches Us to Pray More Effectively – Christian/Spirituality

The Heir

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert, July 8: Crime and Suspense, Christian Spirituality and Erotica, Plus Grand Canyon Guide (Today’s Sponsor) and Over a Hundred Free Promotional Kindle Store Titles

Thursday morning finds a new crime and suspense title plus an interesting juxtaposition of erotica and Christian spirituality titles added to our list of over a hundred free promotional titles in the Kindle Store, sorted by category….

But first, a word from … Today’s Sponsor

If you’re planning a trip to the Grand Canyon and its surrounding environs, noted travel author and photographer Bruce Grubbs’ Grand Canyon Guide is the perfect companion. If you haven’t yet decided on a trip, this book’s gorgeous photography, great maps, and wealth of clear, helpful information may help you make the decision.

Grand Canyon Guide is a complete guide to the national park and surrounding area, whether you want to enjoy the rim viewpoints, stay in a rim lodge, hike the trails, or spend a week running the Colorado River. The Kindle book complements its companion website, www.GrandCanyonGuide.net.

The Grand Canyon Guide renders beautifully on the Kindle and Kindle DX, and its full-color photography, maps, and links to further information are also especially elegant when seen on other devices including the iPad, iPod Touch, PC, Mac, and Android. After publishing a number of well-received travel guides through Globe Pequot Press, Grubbs, already an established travel author, has taken his Grand Canyon Guide direct to the Kindle platform so that he can offer its rich content at a very affordable $4.95 price.  

Click here to download Grand Canyon Guide to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, PC or Mac and start rerading within 60 seconds!

Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title, and of course, we encourage you to support our sponsors. Some of these paid titles will be from our own Kindle Nation Daily press (an imprint of Harvard Perspectives Press), while others will be paid titles from other authors and publishers.

Authors, Publishers, Kindle Accessory Manufacturers:

Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information:

Sponsor a Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert!

What Is the Gospel?

Here’s a list of the categories in today’s Free Book Alert:

Crime and Suspense
Samples
Memoir, Biography, Personal Story
Writing and Publishing
Children/Young Adult/Teen
Contemporary Fiction
Nonfiction/Leadership/Change/Reference/Essay

Christian Spirituality and Christian Fiction

Science Fiction and Fantasy

Romance 
Erotica
Gay and Lesbian 

Tumor Chapter 1
Tumor Chapter 1

Memoir, Biography, Personal Story

Writing and Publishing
Publish on Amazon Kindle with the DigitalText Platform
Publish on Amazon Kindle with the Digital Text Platform

Children/Young Adult/Teen

The Lost Hero Chapter Sneak Peek

by Rick Riordan
Contemporary Fiction

The Hunters
The Hunters

Nonfiction/Business/Leadership/Change/Reference/Essay

 Sam Walton’s Way (FT Press Business Short)

What I Learned from Peter Drucker (FT Press Business Short)

Christian Spirituality and Christian Fiction

What Is the Gospel?
Highland Blessings
On Earth as It Is in Heaven: How the Lord

On Earth as It Is in Heaven: How the Lord’s Prayer Teaches Us to Pray More Effectively – Christian/Spirituality

The Heir

Free Kindle Nation Shorts – July 6, 2010: An Excerpt from CLAWS 2, a new adventure thriller by Stacey Cochran … “Think JAWS in the forest” …

By Stephen Windwalker
Editor of Kindle Nation Daily ©Kindle Nation Daily 2010
“Down on her luck and bankrupt, embattled wildlife biologist Dr. Angie Rippard accepts a long-shot assignment from the governor of Colorado to determine once and for all if grizzly bears are completely extinct in the southwest corner of the state.
“No one has seen a grizzly north of Durango since 1979, but the governor needs proof to halt development of a 6,000-acre ski resort that will devastate the natural resources of the region.
“What Angie finds will forever disrupt construction of the 500-million-dollar resort, and pits her against powerful political forces that will stop at nothing to see that her research never sees the light of day… even if it means hunting her to her death through the worst snowstorm ever seen in the mountains near Telluride.”

That’s how the cover copy reads for Stacey Cochran’s new thriller CLAWS 2. And it’s

Cochran with fellow thriller author James Patterson
Stacey Cochran with James Patterson

also true that “Jaws in the forest” does high-concept justice to the novel’s premise.

But there are plenty of writers capable of coming up with a great premise. But the more of Cochran’s work that I read, the more I am finding that what sets him apart from many other authors is his mastery not only of narrative but of place, of characterization, and, of course, of the particularities of real human terror.

Stacey Cochran has been kind of enough to share with us the prologue and first five chapters of CLAWS 2.


The full-length novel is available for just $2.99 in the Kindle Store, along with the first book in his series about the all too believable adventures of wildlife biologist Dr. Angie Rippard, CLAWS, which for now is available for just 99 cents.

*     *     *
Stacey Cochran is the author of CLAWS, The Colorado Sequence, Amber Page, The Kiribati Test, and now CLAWS 2. Visit him on the web at http://staceycochran.com
.
*     *     *
Kindle Readers’ Reviews of CLAWS
“Like Jaws in the forest.” – Jason Hess

“CLAWS was one of the first books that I downloaded for my Kindle and I couldn’t stop reading. Makes you think twice about going camping.” – Holly Christine, author of Tuesday Tells It Slant

*     *     *


Authors, publishers, and interested readers:


CLICK HERE to learn how you can connect with thousands of Kindle owners by participating in the Free Kindle Nation Shorts program

 or click here to learn about how you and your Kindle book can gain visibility as a sponsor of the Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert program!

An Excerpt from
CLAWS 2


A Novel by STACEY COCHRAN
Copyright © 2010 Stacey Cochran and reprinted here with his permission


Prologue



Rain hammered the tent.


Beth Jansen and her eight-year-old son Ethan lay inside in the darkness and dampness, feeling cold and wet. The air smelled of mildew and insect repellent. Ethan coughed.


“Can’t sleep.”


“Everything is fine,” she said. “Settle down. Go to sleep.”


Rain pooled on top of their tent, seeping through in drops that fell on the sleeping bags.


Beth had wanted this trip to Colorado to work for months, was desperate for it to work. Ethan was her youngest of three boys, and his growing up unsettled her. Her oldest boy was eighteen, and he had dropped out of high school the year before, moved a thousand miles from home, and worked at a pizza joint. He lived in a dive that Beth couldn’t block from her thoughts at night.


The middle boy was sixteen and had flunked the ninth grade. He threatened her daily that he would leave, and Beth knew it was just a matter of time before he took off to join his older brother. She wouldn’t be surprised to find him gone when she got home from this trip.


This wasn’t how she’d pictured motherhood when she was a girl growing up on a farm in Gilbert, Arizona, and it ate her up inside to think that she was failing as a parent. Women around her neighborhood talked about her behind her back. They talked about her outbursts and about her husband’s walking out on her when the youngest was still in diapers.


But maybe the third boy Ethan would turn out alright. Maybe. He still had some time before he’d hit his teen years, and if she gave him quality time now, she thought, he might not turn on her as badly when he became a teenager.


She started humming Amazing Grace.


Ethan flicked on his flashlight.


“Turn it off,” she said.


Ethan shined the light at the tent’s ceiling. They could see where the weight of the water pressed down on the fabric.


“I thought I heard something,” he said.


“Off.”


Ethan clicked off his flashlight.


“I’m cold,” he said.


His mom said nothing.


“I hate camping,” he said.


“Hush,” she said. “Be still.”


Ethan looked at the water dripping down on top of his sleeping bag. Lightning flashed across the sky, followed by an enormous rumble of thunder. Their campsite was going to get washed away.


Beth sat up in her sleeping bag. The rain continued to pound the tent. She unzipped her bag and leaned toward the front tent flap.


“What’re you doing?” Ethan asked.


“Shhh,” Beth said. “Sleep.”


She stepped outside and swept her hand over the rain cover. Water poured down the sides. She thought about walking back down the mountain to her car. She and Ethan would be drier in the hatchback, but they probably wouldn’t get any sleep.


She could carry the tent and rain cover to a Laundromat in Durango in the morning. They could wash it and dry it, but the walk back down the mountain to her car was over three miles. It would take them at least an hour, provided they didn’t get lost. And it was pitch black out.


Beth saw something move out of the corner of her eye, and adrenaline hit her. She swung around. Her hair was soaked, and she rubbed water from her brow. She squinted into the darkness and rain.


Another bolt of lightning ripped from the sky, brightening the forest. Thunder crackled and enveloped them.


“God,” she gasped.


“Mom?” Ethan called from inside the tent.


“Hush,” she said. “Hand me the flashlight.”


“I’m scared.”


Beth knelt down and looked inside the tent. “The flashlight, Ethan.”


He sat up in his sleeping bag and handed the flashlight to her. She took it and let the tent flap close.


Ethan saw the flashlight turn on through the fabric of the tent. His mom stepped a few feet away, and she shined the light from right to left across the far end of the campsite. Ethan waited for some response, and the rain continued to pour.


The light went out, and Ethan heard growling.


“Mom?” he called.


No reply. She’d been standing about ten feet away when the flashlight vanished, and Ethan leaned forward and pulled the tent flap back. Rainwater spattered up off the ground, and he saw the flashlight was still on. It had fallen down among thick grass at the edge of their site. Ethan didn’t see his-


“Mom!” he shouted into the rain.


Again, no reply. The rain poured down on him. He scanned the darkness at the edge of the site, and terror took hold.


Oh, my God, he thought. Oh, my God!


The fear was paralyzing. He lay down flat in the middle of the tent, his eyes looking out to the left. He didn’t want to move. He couldn’t move. He was afraid to call out.


Then, he heard something large moving outside the tent. He knew it wasn’t his mom. He knew it was a wild animal. It sniffed at the tent, and Ethan saw its nose pressing down against the fabric. His eyes went wide, the adrenaline so intense that he was in shock.


The animal moved around to the front of the tent.


Ethan heard a deep burbling noise, followed by three breathy “whoofing” sounds. The animal exhaled and padded around outside in the rain. It was huge.


And then, everything became silent. It sounded like the animal had walked away. Ethan lay on the floor of the tent, terrified beyond any other fear he’d ever known.


Ten seconds passed. The rain continued to hammer the tent. The floor was wet, and Ethan’s shirt had soaked through. It was cold, and his breath steamed. He lay there another ten seconds willing the animal to go away.


Please go away. Please go away. Please go away.


He didn’t hear it at all, and slowly, he raised himself up off of the floor. He sat on his knees, as though in prayer, and he stared at the tent flap hanging loosely in front of him.


If he just looked and saw that the animal was gone, he would be alright. He just needed to know that it was gone. He didn’t want to die, and so he started to reach forward to pull the tent flap back.


His hand was one inch away from the flap.


He reached forward and touched it. Ethan started to pull the flap to the right.


All of a sudden he heard a roar so loud it ripped apart his world.


A giant bear’s head emerged through the flap.


Ethan screamed and fell back into the tent. The bear swung right and left, cords and stakes ripping up from the earth. Ethan screamed and screamed, but then the bear’s head came forward and its mouth bit his right leg.


Ethan screamed!


The tent fell on top of him, and he batted wildly at it. The bear pulled him from the tent, but Ethan managed to turn over and clawed at the ground.


He felt mud and earth, and he swung around. The bear did not let go of his leg. Tears streamed down the sides of his face. His mouth was wide, screaming like no other scream he’d ever screamed in his life. Then the bear let go.


Ethan had a quarter of a second to try and roll over. He saw the flashlight in the grass. He could smell wet animal fur. The ground was wet, grainy and cold. He had mud on his hands, and he could taste a granola bar he’d eaten an hour ago.


He saw something lying in the grass at the edge of the site. It looked like a shoe sticking up from the weeds.


Then the bear was over him. Enormous.


He screamed, “Please, God, help me!”


The bear’s mouth came down towards his face, and everything faded to black.




One



Frank Dalton glared across his desk at Angie Rippard with unconcealed hatred. He was a backwoods political man who wielded his Telluride mayorship like some sort of mafia kingpin. Angie had read up on his back story and found he’d been divorced four times, but she held that information in quiet reserve.


“There are no grizzly bears in southwest Colorado,” Dalton barked. “None. Do you hear me, Ms. Rippard? And frankly, I don’t have time to waste on a woman like you. With ski season getting underway, there are issues far more important in Telluride than a desperate biologist and a governor who believes in ghosts.”


Dalton wore a black cowboy hat cocked back on his head at an angle, and he kept pushing his glasses up on his nose. The lenses were as thick as Coke bottle bottoms, and they made his blue eyes look like fish eyes.


Angie said, “The governor believes that the San Juan grizzly may not be a gho-”


“And her obvious mental lapse in funding a woman like you as some sort of half-assed maverick research biologist is a total waste of tax-payer dollars.”


The misogynistic undercurrent of Dalton’s statement was so palpable that Angie thought she had misunderstood him. Her brow furrowed, not believing that any twenty-first century human being could be so transparently hateful. She was about to ask him what he meant, but Dalton made it plenty clear.


“Women are not meant to be researchers, Ms. Rippard,” he said. “And maybe it seems a tad bit out of step to you, but I don’t believe they’re meant to hold elected office either. There was a time in the great state of Colorado when women knew their place. After all, the constitution of the United States clearly says ‘All men are created equal.’ Women, on the other hand, are nothing more than housewives and whores.”


Angie stared at him. She couldn’t believe what she was hearing.


Finally she said, “Are you insane?”


“Excuse me, Ms. Rippard?”


“First off,” she said, “it’s Doctor Rippard. Secondly, I don’t know what Cro-Magnon universe you fell out of, but I was asked to be here. The governor of Colorado believes you have the last remnant of Colorado grizzlies up here in these mountains.” She looked out Dalton’s office window at snow-capped La Junta and Palmyra Peaks to the southeast. “Now whether she’s right or whether she’s wrong remains to be seen. But that’s why I’m here, ’cause if there’s a pocket of Colorado grizzlies in the San Juan Mountains, they’d be the most endangered mammal in North America.”


Dalton smirked but said nothing. Angie could smell his body odor across the desk.


She continued, “And, Mayor Dalton, I’m aware of the amount of money paid to cede the 550 land to Abraham Foxwell. I’m aware of his plans with W.D.A. Corp. That’s why I’m here; because if, and again I say if, there is a remnant population of Colorado grizzlies up there, he’ll be forced to suspend construction, and he’ll have to move his slash-and-burn development elsewhere.”


Frank Dalton stared emotionlessly at her. The silence in the room was hot enough to fry an egg on. Outside his office window a gentle snow fell silently, and trucks and SUVs crawled slowly up the two-lane downtown street. Local weathermen were predicting eight to ten inches for the coming twenty-four hours.


“Are you done?” Dalton said.


Angie stared.


“Are you quite finished, Ms. Rippard? Because I was going to offer you my help. A number of my associates are connected with the proposed resort. Five hundred million dollars is an amount of money that a woman of your experience simply cannot understand. I might as well be talking Swahili.”


Angie leaned forward to say something, but Dalton plowed through her.


“That kind of money is just a glimpse of what Abraham Foxwell would do with full access to those mountains. His resort would create a new economy for an economically depressed section of the state around Silverton, south to Durango-hundreds of jobs in construction alone. And once the resort was up and running? Revenue from construction alone would be enough to put food on the table of a lot of out-of-work laborers from Durango to Ridgeway, and that’s not mentioning the resort itself with a proposed six thousand skiable acres. We would rival Aspen-Snowmass to the north. And if he connects his resort over the mountains to Telluride, we would be the largest ski resort in the world, Ms. Rippard. The largest. In the world. Do you understand what that means?”


Angie had not heard these actual numbers before. “Six thousand acres,” she said. “That’s nearly half of San Juan County.”


“Now, I’m obliged to introduce you to the power surrounding that resort, but you’re going to need to show some respect to these billionaires or they’ll laugh at you like a fart in the wind. And if you think my attitude is unflattering, you haven’t seen anything. The kind of money associated with the proposed resort, the kind of money that builds ski resorts, it’d think nothing of cutting your throat and leaving you in the woods to die. And they’ll do the same to any grizzly bear they find living up there. To them, the government’s position was made crystal clear when it said the last San Juan grizzly was shot and killed by Ed Wiseman in 1979. To them, there are no grizzlies in the San Juan Mountains, and they’d like to keep it that way.”


“But that may not, in fact, be the c-”


“Now, if you’d like to play like a nice little girl, I’ll show you around town. Reluctantly. But if you insist on treating me with a lack of respect, I’ll throw you to the wolves.”


Angie was speechless. Her mind raced at light speed. Her breathing was shallow, her palms clammy and cold.


I’m going to kill this son of a bitch, she thought. I swear to God, I’m going to kill him.


“Now,” Frank Dalton said, “I have more important things to attend to in my day, and I’m certain your feminine needs require a transitional period while you move into town. It’s my understanding you’re living alone. Ain’t right for a woman to live alone. If you ask me, it’s strange.”


Angie bit her lip and sat forward in her seat; her hands gripped the chair’s armrests.


“So,” he continued, “I will allow you three days to establish yourself in town. You’re moving into a home out past Matterhorn Road, I understand. Not a very safe location considering the gun-owning citizens that far south in the county. I’d wear bright orange if I was you. Or, better yet, camouflage might be best considering your position.”


Angie stared at him.


He grinned. “Most folks think people like you are nuts, like the wackos who say they’ve been abducted by space aliens. Believing in Colorado grizzly bears is tantamount to believing in ghosts. This new ski resort, on the other hand, is real and could create a stable economy. Many of the working class folks outside of town are going to want to see you hung up, Dr. Rippard. It’s just a word of caution.”


Angie sat silently, staring at him. Dalton gazed across the landscape of his desk at her. Slowly, Angie’s blue eyes rose up to meet his gaze. Her brown hair was back in a ponytail, but several strands hung down on either side. She was beautiful in a rugged self-reliant kind of way, yet she was sophisticated enough to move from three weeks in the backcountry to a Denver boardroom arguing conservation agendas to real estate developers. Angie moistened her rosy lips, and an index finger came up and tapped his desk. She looked into Dalton’s eyes.


“Tell me one thing,” she said.


Dalton frowned.


“If there are no grizzlies up there,” she said, “if you feel so emphatically, so unequivocally certain that there are none-no grizzlies at all-in the San Juan mountains, why did you vote just four years ago toward a resolution making it illegal to hunt and kill grizzlies in San Juan County? If there are none, why would you need to do that?”


Frank Dalton stared at her. He stuttered feebly a moment and then fell silent. He could think of no answer that wouldn’t compromise his position.




Two



Abraham Foxwell had silver hair and ice-blue eyes that peered out from the eighty-second floor of Makalu Tower. The building was the highest in Denver and the third tallest in North America behind the Sears Tower and the Empire State Building. It had initially been named Makalu Tower after the fifth highest mountain in the world to correlate with its being the fifth highest building in North America. That status had changed after the terrorist attacks of 2001, when Foxwell’s fifth highest building became the third highest.


The view from the eighty-second floor was astounding.


Twelve hundred feet above the Denver city streets and three hundred and sixty degrees around the boardroom, the view had astonished the most powerful people on earth. To the east, Colorado was a flat sea that stretched two hundred miles to Kansas. Foxwell liked to hear his people say that on a clear day, they could see all the way to the Atlantic. To the west, the snowcapped Front Range loomed over the city.


Twelve men sat around the boardroom table. There were three women. Everyone was dressed in business attire. Everyone watched Abraham standing by the window. He gazed out at the Front Range.


“What do we hear from our man in Telluride?” he said.


One of the suits spoke. “He briefed the biologist this morning.”


Abraham’s head pivoted around, and his blue eyes caught the eyes of the suit who had spoken. He was the youngest member on the board, a brown-haired Ivy Leaguer with a Southern accent who was destined for Congress in ten years. Maybe less.


“You have her file?”


“Angie Rippard,” Ivy League said. “Doctor Angie Rippard. If you ask me, Governor’s graspin’ at straws.”


He opened a manila folder atop the boardroom table. The table was forty feet long. Each board member looked at Ivy League. Abraham waited for the kid to capitulate and just gazed into his brown eyes. Eventually, the kid shrugged and looked at the fellow board members. Abraham stared a moment more, then turned calmly back toward the view of the Front Range.


“Governor Janet Creed wants you to think she’s grasping at straws. Never underestimate a woman in a position of power.”


He glanced over his shoulder at the three female board members. Two nodded. The third stared without comment at the varnished mahogany shine on the boardroom table.


“And our ground team?” Abraham said.


One of the women, an almond-eyed redhead in an ivory Carolina Herrera skirt suit with four cognac-colored buttons on the front, said: “We have mobile surveillance on the ground.”


“Of course we have mobile surveillance on the ground,” Abraham said. “What do they tell us?”


“It’s the same thing,” she said. “There are no grizzly bears in southwest Colorado. No one has seen a grizzly bear in southwest Colorado since 1979. They’re extinct.”


“That may well be,” Abraham said. “I want a dozen more men in the San Juan mountains. There can’t be so much as a paw print in those mountains. Do you understand what I’m saying?”


“Yes, sir.”


“If this biologist finds a grizzly bear in San Juan County, you know what that’d make it?” He stepped over to the boardroom table; every board member had heard this drill before, but no one answered. His eyes moved from one pair to the next. “It’d make it the most endangered species in North America.”


No one said a word. Abraham continued to look around at each pair of eyes. Everyone stared at him.


“Now our position is perfectly