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Penguin/Putname/Pearson eBooks Returning to Kindle at Highest Agency Model Prices

As we mentioned here Wednesday, the agency model pricing impasse between Amazon and Penguin/Pearson has been settled, at least for now, and about 150 newer titles released since April 1 are now in the process of being offered in the Kindle Store, including a number of bestsellers that have been sorely missed by many citizens of Kindle Nation:

Fair warning: the publisher has set the prices for these books and has not been shy about hitting the agency model’s $14.99 upper limit in many cases. Also, some titles may disappear intermittently during this transitional phase.

The following is a listing of Penguin/Pearson imprints in the US:

* Ace    
* Alpha    
* Avery    
* Berkley    
* Dutton    
* Gotham    
* G. P. Putnam’s Sons    
* HP Books    
* Hudson Street Press    
* Jeremy P. Tarcher    
* Jove    
* NAL    
* Penguin    
* Penguin Press    
* Perigee    
* Plume    
* Portfolio    
* Prentice Hall Press    
* Riverhead    
* Sentinel    
* Viking  Children’s Division     
* Dial    
* Dutton    
* Firebird   
* Frederick Warne    
* G. P. Putnam’s Sons    
* Grosset & Dunlap    
* Philomel    
* Price Stern Sloan    
* Puffin Books    
* Razorbill    
* Speak    
* Viking

Nook Redux? Barnes & Noble Gets it 90% Right, But Fails Again, with New eReader for iPad App

By Stephen Windwalker

This post appeared originally at the Planet iPad blog.

Related post: The Cancer Spreads: Can B&N;’s Periodicals Offering Really Be a Killer Feature If They Can’t Be Downloaded?

I so wanted to say something nice about Barnes & Noble, the Nook, and its new B&N; eReader App for the iPad. I’ve been a little harsh at times in the past, I’ll admit: even as recently as yesterday.

So, after reading early reviews of the iPad app from a couple of colleagues, and seeing how, as in the above screenshot, it had already soared to the top of all free apps in the iPad App Store, I was ready. I had even written a headline in my mind for the post:

New Reading App from B&N; Advances iPad Experience

At the very least, I felt sure, the new B&N; eReader App’s cool features will put pressure on Amazon and Apple to finish what they’ve started and deliver on the unrealized potential of the Kindle for iPad and iBooks apps.

Then I had to go and ruin it all by actually trying the thing out myself.

I’m sorry. I hate to be a grump, a curmudgeon, or all the other names that B&N; fans might be thinking of for me just now — names that I’m sure I richly deserve — if they are thinking of me at all, which is doubtful.

I downloaded the app. It was free. It took about 20 seconds, and then it only took me another few seconds to delete two earlier iterations of B&N; eReader apps that were not iPad-optimized, and which frankly I had not used much. All good so far.

I downloaded Dracula, one of the free books offered right there on the home screen and was charmed by the nicely realized feature set including all manner of font sizes, font styles, margin settings, background colors, page layouts, page numbers, and the furthest advances yet with respect to annotations and highlighting in an iPad-optimized reading app.

So far, I thought, they’ve raised the bar dramatically, although the lack of selection, while lights years ahead of the iBooks catalog, remains embarrassing compared to that in the Kindle Store.

Time to try to buy something!

Maybe I’m cheap. Maybe it was just my bad judgment, to try to buy a newspaper that I wanted to read for 49 cents rather than laying out $10 or $15 for an ebook (when, after all, I’ve got dozens of books already in my Kindle account and not enough time to read them all on my Kindle, iPad, iPod Touch, Mac, Blackberry, or PC).

I’d already heard from blogging colleagues that, unlike the Kindle for iPad App or the iBooks App, the B&N; eReader App would allow me to buy a newspaper and read it! Perfect for the iPad, I thought, and very convenient since after watching the last night’s NBA playoff game I wanted to see what my local Boston Globe writers had to say about elbows, concussions, and gratuitous technical fouls. But I digress.

I clicked on “add books” and was transported to the B&N; ebook store.

I clicked on eNewspapers and finger-flicked my way down to the fourth row to find the Globe. There it was, ready to buy, with a big fat “Buy Current Issue” button and a nice graphic of the iPad and a bunch of other gadgets right next to the words “Works with any computer or mobile device.”

My mouth was watering, and I will admit that I was wondering why Amazon was so slow to offer periodicals and blogs (yeah, like this one!) in all its various Kindle apps, and why Amazon was so slow to bring obviously needed upgrades including some of the features mentioned a few paragraphs up to its Kindle for iPad app, and why Amazon this, and why Amazon that. But, yep, I digress. This isn’t flippin’ Ulysses, after all, and I do not need to be boring you with my interior monologue.

I tapped the Buy button.

The credit card I had on file with B&N; had expired a couple of years ago, so I was prompted to enter my credit card, my name, my address, and even the little three-digit security code that Amazon has never ever asked me for from the back of my credit card. I gave it all up willingly, perhaps even gratefully. Take that, Mr. Bezos! And you, too, Mr. Jobs!

Might I be well on the way to becoming a B&N; guy? A Nook Man?

I might, I might! It might be something less than a fundamental reordering of the U.S. economy, but the thousands of dollars I have spent with Amazon and Apple over the past few years might soon be redirected to “the bookstore I grew up with,” as Barnes & Noble’s latest marketing message so generously puts it in describing a store that didn’t exist until I was in my 20s.

An email appeared almost instantaneously in my inbox confirming my purchase. The 49-cent charge appeared magically among the somewhat larger pending charges in my online credit card account display.

I was close to newspaper-reading bliss!

Back to the home screen, then, where I tapped on the Globe image that had already appeared there.

And here is what I saw next:

Technical difficulties.

I winced. I tried again, exited, re-entered, tapped and tapped again, searching for some way around the little glitch that, ever the optimist, I was sure would soon be set right.

Finally, at long last, a different message appeared:

Aha. Everything was explained.

“This item is not yet supported on this device.”

And not only that! Also, “We are sorry.”

Okay then.

How about, “Click here for an automatic freakin’ refund!”

Or how about “Not only are we sorry, but here’s why we’re sorry: we just wasted 5 minutes of your time because nobody on our incredibly lame team bothered to take 5 minutes for quality control before we rolled this out.”

Nope. Because this is Barnes & Noble, which used an old Edsel launch manual for its Nook roll-out in November, and has continued to foul its own bed with nearly every step it has taken in the ebook arena.

Sure, they will fix it sooner or later, maybe tonight. Everything gets fixed sooner or later, doesn’t it? And true, there are a lot of cool features in their new app, which will certainly accelerate the work that the serious players in this arena must do to catch up.

But the bottom line is that B&N; has screwed up again. I could be more generous, I’m sure. I could take a step back, take a deep breath, and conclude that I just happened to hit on the one minor screw-up in this latest launch, that there would probably be no others.

But, you know, it’s Santayana and the history thing. We’ve been there and done that:

You know the quote from Santayana: “Those who cannot learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” Actually, on a certain level, you could say that B&N; seems to learn very well from “history.” As I said in a post yesterday, “the best way to predict what Barnes & Noble will do at any given time is to look at what Amazon did two or three years ago.”

But I didn’t get that exactly right, did I?

To be more precise, what Barnes & Noble will do at any given time is to take what Amazon did two or three years ago and figure out how to screw it up.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Thursday, May 27: Democratizing Innovation by Eric von Hippel, MIT Press, and Dozens More

Democratizing Innovation




Democratizing Innovation (Kindle Edition)

by Eric von Hippel (Author)

4.6 out of 5 stars  (11 customer reviews)


Digital List Price: $18.95  What’s this?
Print List Price: $18.95
Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet

“Eric von Hippel has a penchant for identifying important aspects of technological innovation that run contrary to conventional wisdom and to the thrust of conventional scholarship. His work on the important role that users, rather than suppliers, play in the advance of technology casts the process in a new light. This book is an intellectual feast.”
—Richard R. Nelson, George Blumenthal Professor of International and Public Affairs, Business, and Law, Columbia University

“Eric von Hippel has written a genuinely important book on innovation. Combining a wealth of case studies and data with a clear and systematically developed theoretical framework, Democratizing Innovation turns much of how we think about innovation economics on its head. Von Hippel has provided us with a fascinating book that will challenge innovation theorists and businesses alike.”
—Yochai Benkler, Professor of Law, Yale Law School

Here are our other updated free promotional listings in the Kindle Store as of May 27:

An AmazonEncore title leads the list of free Kindle Store offerings on this lovely Spring morning, not that there’s anything wrong with that:

Strings Attached (Kindle Edition)

by Nick Nolan (Author)

4.4 out of 5 stars  (59 customer reviews)


Digital List Price: $9.99  What’s this?
Print List Price: $12.99
Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
You Save: $12.99 (100%)

Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Here’s a quick free read (or text-to-speech listen) for your commute, just a little something to whet your appetite for the full release of J.A. Konrath’s latest Jack Daniels mystery, Shaken, which will be published initially in a Kindle exclusive by AmazonEncore this Fall and is available, at least for now, at a pre-order price of $2.99. I don’t ordinarily include many “free samples” in the Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alerts because many of them are just trying to game the bestseller lists through the redundancy of offering something that is already free as a Kindle Store free sample. But when a teaser like Konrath’s comes out while the full ebook is still in its unreleased pre-order state, as in this case, a worthwhile purpose is served.

No customer reviews yet. Be the first.

Digital List Price: $0.00  What’s this?
Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet

Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Daughter of Joy (Brides of Culdee Creek, Book 1) (Kindle Edition)

by Kathleen Morgan (Author)

4.5 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)


Digital List Price: $12.99  What’s this?
Print List Price: $12.99
Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
You Save: $12.99 (100%)

Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Rage of Angels (Kindle Edition)

by Sidney Sheldon (Author)

4.7 out of 5 stars  (81 customer reviews)


Print List Price: $7.99
Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
You Save: $7.99 (100%)
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers

This price was set by the publisher
 
Steve Martini’s Shadow of Power Free with Bonus Material

by Steve Martini – Pre-order for May 25, 2010 Release

Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers
This price was set by the publisher

Text-to-Speech: Enabled

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 655 KB
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Up to 5 simultaneous devices, per publisher limits
  • Publisher: HarperCollins e-books (May 25, 2010)
  • Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers

The Truth About Negotiations by Leigh L. Thompson

Product Description

On the road to forever, anything goes-
An Out of Uniform story.
Carson Scott is the king of one-night stands, so a naughty encounter with a sexy brunette in a nightclub supply closet is right up his alley. When his mysterious seductress disappears, he-s blindsided by an unfamiliar emotion-disappointment. One thing-s for sure-if he ever encounters his lady of the evening again, he won-t let her slip away so easily.
Between her catering business, family issues, and her broken heart, Holly Lawson has too much on her plate to think about committing to a serious relationship. Hot, sweaty, anonymous sex with a Navy SEAL-now that sounds like the perfect appetizer to take the edge off. With no plans to ever see him again, she indulges in a fling. Only to come face to face with him weeks later while working a wedding.
Worse, Carson is hell-bent on the one thing she doesn-t want. The R word. She has no intention of falling for him, but in the face of his seductive, mind-changing methods, her resistance is crumbling-
Warning: This title contains a ridiculously hot Navy SEAL, a sassy heroine, and sex in a supply closet. Read only if you have time to take a cold shower afterwards. Graphic sex, explicit language.

Milrose Munce and the Den of Professional Help
Proper Pursuit, A
Colters
Swashbuckling Fantasy: 10 Thrilling Tales of Magical Adventure
Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #4: Savior
Breach of Trust
Living and Learning with New Media: Summary of Findings from theDigital Youth Project
The Joy of Pregnancy: The Complete, Candid, and ReassuringCompanion for Parents-to-Be
The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age
Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture: MediaEducation for the 21st Century
Young People, Ethics, and the New Digital Media: A Synthesis fromthe Good Play Project

News Flash: Kindle Availability of John Sandford’s Storm Prey Signals Peace Treaty Between Amazon and Penguin

Update: Nine minutes after we put up the original post below at 2:41 pm ET today, May 26, Amazon confirmed our post by posting the following on one of its community threads:

Amazon has reached an agreement with Penguin and we are happy to announce that we will soon be offering their complete selection of digital books on Kindle.

Permalink

No sign of the latest Sookie Stackhouse yet, but thanks to Kindle Nation citizen Dave for passing along indications that peace may be breaking out in this agency model war:

Product Details
My Double Life by Janette Rallison (Kindle Edition – May 13, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $9.99 Other Editions: Hardcover

Product Details
Restoring Harmony by Joelle Anthony (Kindle Edition – May 13, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $9.99
Product Details
Sea by Heidi Kling (Kindle Edition – June 10, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $9.99

Product Details
Where’s My Wand? by Eric Poole (Kindle Edition – May 27, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $9.99 Other Editions: Hardcover

Product Details
I’ll Mature When I’m Dead by Dave Barry (Kindle Edition – May 4, 2010)Kindle Book
Buy: $9.99
Other Editions: Audio CD

Product Details
The Skorpion Directive by David Stone (Kindle Edition – Apr. 29, 2010)Kindle Book
Other Editions: Hardcover, Audio Download

Product Details
The Book of Awesome by Neil Pasricha (Kindle Edition – Apr. 15, 2010)Kindle Book
Currently unavailable
Other Editions: Hardcover, Paperback
Product Details
Everything Is Broken by Emma Larkin (Kindle Edition – Apr. 29, 2010)Kindle Book
Product Details
LeBron’s Dream Team by LeBron James (Kindle Edition – Apr. 27, 2010)Kindle Book
Currently unavailable

It Is Well with My Soul by Ella Mae Cheeks Johnson and Patricia Mulcahy (Kindle Edition – Apr. 27, 2010)Kindle Book

Around the Kindlesphere, May 26, 2010: iPad Do’s and Don’ts, Instapaper, Cheap Android Tablet, 2 Million CreateSpace Titles, Jake Harper, G-Men Probe Apple

This stuff builds up if I don’t let it out in the open, so I hope you don’t mind my sharing:

  • If you’re considering an iPad purchase, Instapaper founder Marco Arment has a balanced take on what it does and doesn’t do, at least for him, at Marco.org.
  • Speaking of Marco and Instapaper, may I say that Instapaper is absolutely the most important tool that I use in my relentless effort to keep up with what is going on not only in the Kindlesphere but in the entire world. I use it every day with my Kindle, my iPad, and my Mac, and it allows me to store away all the interesting tidbits, articles, posts, and websites that I find anywhere on the web, so that I can read them later. I just wish Marco or comebody would come up with an app that would allow me to expand the dimensions of later.
  • I don’t know a thing about who manufactures this $136 8″ Touch Screen TFT LCD Google Android 1.6 Tablet PC w/ WiFi – White (533MHz), but I saw it mentioned at O’Reilly Radar and I’ve gotta admit that the price turned my head.
  • All the publishers who are worried about the Kindle and ebook sales should be at least as worried about the announcement this week that Amazon’s CreateSpace printing, publication, and distribution subsidiary has passed the 2 million title milestone. I could tell them from personal experience that CreateSpace is unmatched when it comes to professional printing quality, production and distribution cost, customer service, and worldwide penetration to bookstores and libraries. For books as well as music, CreateSpace is not just a DIY or indie or self-publishing option; it’s an enterprise solution that is luring a growing number of formerly traditional publishers to a far more profitable and risk-free 21st-century no-inventory model.
  • Speaking of alternative publishing approaches, Barnes & Noble has launched a new direct ebook publishing pathway, presumably to compete with Amazon’s Kindle Digital Text Platform (DTP). Yet another confirmation that the best way to predict what Barnes & Noble will do at any given time is to look at what Amazon did two or three years ago.
  • Oops, I almost forgot to mention the name of the new Barnes & Noble publishing program. It’s called “pubit.” Long U? Short U? I don’t know. It goes with B&N;’s ebook reader, which is called the “nook.” “pubit.” “nook.” Okay, call me sophomoric for noticing, but isn’t this pretty close to a confirmation that the guy in charge of naming things at B&N; is Jake Harper, the adolescent nephew on Two and a Half Men? Heh, heh. You said “nook.”
  • Reading Brad Stone’s New York Times report today that Justice Department “investigators had asked in particular about recent allegations that Apple used its dominant market position to persuade music labels to refuse to give the online retailer Amazon.com  exclusive access to music about to be released,” I can’t help but wonder if it is not just a matter of time before the G-men start a full-bore inquiry into Apple’s collusion with so-called agency model book publishers to fix prices in the ebook marketplace in order to turn competition upside down in an effort to block Amazon’s pro-consumer ebook pricing strategies.

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Wednesday, May 26: A Reprise for Terri Blackstock’s ‘Private Justice,’ and Dozens More

Here again, gone again, back again, free again.

These two novels from religious publisher Zondervan were free in the Kindle Store a week ago, then paid, and this morning they are free again. Why ask why?

Paperback Original Releases Today; Kindle Edition Coming June 1
Discover books, read about the author, find related products, and more. Visit the page.

For seventeen years, before his thrillers landed him on The New York Times Bestseller list, Kevin O’Brien made his living as a railroad inspector and did all his writing at night. His second novel, Only Son (1996), was optioned for film rights, thanks to interest from Tom Hanks. It was also chosen by Readers Digest for its Select Editions along with John Grisham’s The Partner and John Nance’s Medusa’s Child.

Kevin has been writing full time ever since.

The Next to Die, Kevin O’Brien’s third novel–and first thriller–was a USA Today Bestseller. So if on occassion, you find a scene in a Kevin O’Brien thriller in which a dead body is discovered in an old railroad yard or depot, well, now you know why.

Kevin O’Brien’s last four thrillers have all been New York Times Bestsellers. The most recent is Final Breath. Kevin lives in Seattle, loves Hitchcock movies, and is hard at work on his new thriller, Vicious, which will be available in May, 2010.

Here are our other updated free promotional listings in the Kindle Store as of May 26:

An AmazonEncore title leads the list of free Kindle Store offerings on this lovely Spring morning, not that there’s anything wrong with that:

Strings Attached (Kindle Edition)

by Nick Nolan (Author)

4.4 out of 5 stars  (59 customer reviews)


Digital List Price: $9.99  What’s this?
Print List Price: $12.99
Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
You Save: $12.99 (100%)

Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Book Description
Closeted teenager Jeremy is sent to live with wealthy relatives after his mother enters rehab. Struggling to fit into the posh world of Ballena Beach, Jeremy joins the high school swim team, dates a popular girl, and begins to think he may have landed in paradise—until his great aunt Katharine starts to dictate his every move … and a late-night phone call insinuates that his father’s accidental death was not so accidental after all.

As Jeremy grows accustomed to the veneer of a fabulous life, so grows his need for answers—as well as the danger of immeasurable harm. Weaving together a murder mystery, sexual ambiguity, and characters with hidden identities and agendas , Nick Nolan offers readers a deliciously witty page-turner about the “puppet” who wishes only to be a real boy. Strings Attached is also a surprisingly heartfelt story about coming-of-age and coming out—not necessarily in that order.



A Q&A; with Author Nick Nolan


Question: Tell us more about 17-year-old Jeremy Tyler, and how you created your lead character? Nick Nolan: I set out to create someone with a dazzling character arc; someone that people–gay or straight–could relate to and root for. And I’ve always loved the sort of conflict that arises with a “fish out of water” storyline–watching how someone adapts to a cataclysmic life change is fascinating. And one’s teen years are inherently cataclysmic, so poor Jeremy is nearly overwhelmed. He goes from being poor and fatherless and hopeless to rich and fabulous and sought-after–but still miserable because he isn’t being himself. I believe that he’s a protagonist that most people will sympathize with.
Question: Strings Attached touches on themes of betrayal, greed, wealth, lust, beauty, love, and temptation. That is a lot for a young man to deal with. Would you explain how you weave these into the plot?
Nick Nolan: Lust is desire mixed with obsession, and many of the characters in this story can’t separate the two–sometimes to their great detriment. Each of these elements is related: those in possession of beauty and wealth can tempt those without to lust and temptation and greed, but seldom to love. These are all tied-up inside the human experience of “wanting.” In the book, Jeremy’s father tells him–in a dream–that one needs to be selfish with respect to what one needs, but to pursue judiciously that which one wants–it’s a paradox that few ever take the time to understand.
Question: Your book is a loose reinvention of the classic Pinocchio story. Would you tell us a little more about your connection with the Pinocchio tale, and your decision to work it into your story? Who is struggling with ‘strings attached’?
Nick Nolan: Pinocchio is a great tale, which is why everyone remembers it; I think it reflects the pan-human desire to become a better version of ourselves–the wish to become our ideal. So I studied the original story, written by Carlo Collodi many years before that famous cartoon movie. His book seems like a fairy tale, but scholars will tell you that it is steeped in social commentary–and so is my book. Jeremy really is a puppet of the adults around him–with the exception of Arthur, who plays the Blue Fairy; Arthur anticipates his every need, and at the end of the book when we find-out his true identity we learn how important his contact with Jeremy truly is. I have a villain who echoes the original antagonist in Collodi’s book, and I’ve made more plausible that wishing on a star business–I draw a parallel between that and the old Greek and Roman belief that the constellations were the gods, to whom they prayed for protection and guidance. And finally, there is a very believable twist on the original puppet’s nose-growing; something similar happens when Jeremy lies…but that’s a bit graphic for this interview.
Suffice to say that the Pinocchio parallels are there, but the similarities are subtle–and the story stands on its own without revealing them. And as for who is struggling with “strings attached”… at first one thinks that these bind Jeremy only, and then it becomes clear later on that everyone, except Arthur, in the story struggles against them, because every major theme in the story–beauty, wealth, love, betrayal, lust, greed and temptation–has consequences, or “strings,” attached to it.
Question: Nick, who is your target audience? Who would enjoy reading your book?
Nick Nolan: Initially my target audience was youngish gay men, but I’ve been pleasantly surprised that the appeal of Strings Attached crosses boundaries of age and gender and sexual preference… probably because it’s a coming-of-age story; this particular genre endures because those years are burned into every adult’s psyche. And who doesn’t relate to struggle, and misfortune, and learning to stand up for yourself? Enjoying a good read has little to do with how old you are or whom you sleep with–everyone loves a page-turner when the hero stands victorious at the end.
(This author Q&A; is adapted from an author interview conducted by Juanita Watson, Assistant Editor of Reader Views, and is republished with permission.)

Review

“Strings Attached is the literary equivalent of a prime-time soap opera…readers will have no trouble turning the pages of this engrossing novel…an easy book to get sucked into.” –PHILADELPHIA GAY NEWS

“Beautifully told, it grabs at your heart and emotions and does not let go…Nolan’s language is lush and his description is beautiful … His book is one to cherish and hold onto. We shall not see many like it.” –Amos Lassen, LITERARY PRIDE

“Strings Attached is a wonderful story…a multifaceted piece of fiction dealing with co-dependency, parent-child relationships, anger, violence, love, sexual exploration, and maturation…This is a fast read.” –Rich Wiesenthal, DIVERSITY RULES MAGAZINE

“Nolan’s debut novel is a kitchen sink of genres – coming of age, coming out, mystery, romance, erotica, even a dash of the supernatural – that add up to an impressive story about the passage from boyhood to manhood.” –Richard Labonte, BOOKS TO WATCH OUT FOR

See all Editorial Reviews


Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 471 KB
  • Print Length: 320 pages
  • Publisher: AmazonEncore; Unabridged edition (March 9, 2010)

Here’s a quick free read (or text-to-speech listen) for your commute, just a little something to whet your appetite for the full release of J.A. Konrath’s latest Jack Daniels mystery, Shaken, which will be published initially in a Kindle exclusive by AmazonEncore this Fall and is available, at least for now, at a pre-order price of $2.99. I don’t ordinarily include many “free samples” in the Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alerts because many of them are just trying to game the bestseller lists through the redundancy of offering something that is already free as a Kindle Store free sample. But when a teaser like Konrath’s comes out while the full ebook is still in its unreleased pre-order state, as in this case, a worthwhile purpose is served.

No customer reviews yet. Be the first.

Digital List Price: $0.00  What’s this?
Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet

Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Daughter of Joy (Brides of Culdee Creek, Book 1) (Kindle Edition)

by Kathleen Morgan (Author)

4.5 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)


Digital List Price: $12.99  What’s this?
Print List Price: $12.99
Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
You Save: $12.99 (100%)

Text-to-Speech: Enabled

Rage of Angels (Kindle Edition)

by Sidney Sheldon (Author)

4.7 out of 5 stars  (81 customer reviews)


Print List Price: $7.99
Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
You Save: $7.99 (100%)
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers

This price was set by the publisher
 
Steve Martini’s Shadow of Power Free with Bonus Material

by Steve Martini – Pre-order for May 25, 2010 Release

Kindle Price: $0.00 & includes wireless delivery via Amazon Whispernet
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers
This price was set by the publisher

Text-to-Speech: Enabled

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 655 KB
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Up to 5 simultaneous devices, per publisher limits
  • Publisher: HarperCollins e-books (May 25, 2010)
  • Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers

The Truth About Negotiations by Leigh L. Thompson

Product Description

On the road to forever, anything goes-
An Out of Uniform story.
Carson Scott is the king of one-night stands, so a naughty encounter with a sexy brunette in a nightclub supply closet is right up his alley. When his mysterious seductress disappears, he-s blindsided by an unfamiliar emotion-disappointment. One thing-s for sure-if he ever encounters his lady of the evening again, he won-t let her slip away so easily.
Between her catering business, family issues, and her broken heart, Holly Lawson has too much on her plate to think about committing to a serious relationship. Hot, sweaty, anonymous sex with a Navy SEAL-now that sounds like the perfect appetizer to take the edge off. With no plans to ever see him again, she indulges in a fling. Only to come face to face with him weeks later while working a wedding.
Worse, Carson is hell-bent on the one thing she doesn-t want. The R word. She has no intention of falling for him, but in the face of his seductive, mind-changing methods, her resistance is crumbling-
Warning: This title contains a ridiculously hot Navy SEAL, a sassy heroine, and sex in a supply closet. Read only if you have time to take a cold shower afterwards. Graphic sex, explicit language.

Milrose Munce and the Den of Professional Help
Proper Pursuit, A
Colters
Swashbuckling Fantasy: 10 Thrilling Tales of Magical Adventure
Star Wars: Lost Tribe of the Sith #4: Savior
Breach of Trust
Living and Learning with New Media: Summary of Findings from theDigital Youth Project
The Joy of Pregnancy: The Complete, Candid, and ReassuringCompanion for Parents-to-Be
The Future of Learning Institutions in a Digital Age
Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture: MediaEducation for the 21st Century
Young People, Ethics, and the New Digital Media: A Synthesis fromthe Good Play Project

Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alert for Tuesday, May 25: A “Vicious” Pre-Order Leads Dozens of Free Books in the Kindle Store

Paperback Original Releases Today; Kindle Edition Coming June 1
Discover books, read about the author, find related products, and more. Visit the page.

For seventeen years, before his thrillers landed him on The New York Times Bestseller list, Kevin O’Brien made his living as a railroad inspector and did all his writing at night. His second novel, Only Son (1996), was optioned for film rights, thanks to interest from Tom Hanks. It was also chosen by Readers Digest for its Select Editions along with John Grisham’s The Partner and John Nance’s Medusa’s Child.

Kevin has been writing full time ever since.

The Next to Die, Kevin O’Brien’s third novel–and first thriller–was a USA Today Bestseller. So if on occassion, you find a scene in a Kevin O’Brien thriller in which a dead body is discovered in an old railroad yard or depot, well, now you know why.

Kevin O’Brien’s last four thrillers have all been New York Times Bestsellers. The most recent is Final Breath. Kevin lives in Seattle, loves Hitchcock movies, and is hard at work on his new thriller, Vicious, which will be available in May, 2010.

Here are our other updated free promotional listings in the Kindle Store as of May 25:

An AmazonEncore title leads the list of free Kindle Store offerings on this lovely Spring morning, not that there’s anything wrong with that:

Strings Attached (Kindle Edition)

by Nick Nolan (Author)

4.4 out of 5 stars  (59 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Book Description
Closeted teenager Jeremy is sent to live with wealthy relatives after his mother enters rehab. Struggling to fit into the posh world of Ballena Beach, Jeremy joins the high school swim team, dates a popular girl, and begins to think he may have landed in paradise—until his great aunt Katharine starts to dictate his every move … and a late-night phone call insinuates that his father’s accidental death was not so accidental after all.

As Jeremy grows accustomed to the veneer of a fabulous life, so grows his need for answers—as well as the danger of immeasurable harm. Weaving together a murder mystery, sexual ambiguity, and characters with hidden identities and agendas , Nick Nolan offers readers a deliciously witty page-turner about the “puppet” who wishes only to be a real boy. Strings Attached is also a surprisingly heartfelt story about coming-of-age and coming out—not necessarily in that order.



A Q&A; with Author Nick Nolan


Question: Tell us more about 17-year-old Jeremy Tyler, and how you created your lead character? Nick Nolan: I set out to create someone with a dazzling character arc; someone that people–gay or straight–could relate to and root for. And I’ve always loved the sort of conflict that arises with a “fish out of water” storyline–watching how someone adapts to a cataclysmic life change is fascinating. And one’s teen years are inherently cataclysmic, so poor Jeremy is nearly overwhelmed. He goes from being poor and fatherless and hopeless to rich and fabulous and sought-after–but still miserable because he isn’t being himself. I believe that he’s a protagonist that most people will sympathize with.
Question: Strings Attached touches on themes of betrayal, greed, wealth, lust, beauty, love, and temptation. That is a lot for a young man to deal with. Would you explain how you weave these into the plot?
Nick Nolan: Lust is desire mixed with obsession, and many of the characters in this story can’t separate the two–sometimes to their great detriment. Each of these elements is related: those in possession of beauty and wealth can tempt those without to lust and temptation and greed, but seldom to love. These are all tied-up inside the human experience of “wanting.” In the book, Jeremy’s father tells him–in a dream–that one needs to be selfish with respect to what one needs, but to pursue judiciously that which one wants–it’s a paradox that few ever take the time to understand.
Question: Your book is a loose reinvention of the classic Pinocchio story. Would you tell us a little more about your connection with the Pinocchio tale, and your decision to work it into your story? Who is struggling with ‘strings attached’?
Nick Nolan: Pinocchio is a great tale, which is why everyone remembers it; I think it reflects the pan-human desire to become a better version of ourselves–the wish to become our ideal. So I studied the original story, written by Carlo Collodi many years before that famous cartoon movie. His book seems like a fairy tale, but scholars will tell you that it is steeped in social commentary–and so is my book. Jeremy really is a puppet of the adults around him–with the exception of Arthur, who plays the Blue Fairy; Arthur anticipates his every need, and at the end of the book when we find-out his true identity we learn how important his contact with Jeremy truly is. I have a villain who echoes the original antagonist in Collodi’s book, and I’ve made more plausible that wishing on a star business–I draw a parallel between that and the old Greek and Roman belief that the constellations were the gods, to whom they prayed for protection and guidance. And finally, there is a very believable twist on the original puppet’s nose-growing; something similar happens when Jeremy lies…but that’s a bit graphic for this interview.
Suffice to say that the Pinocchio parallels are there, but the similarities are subtle–and the story stands on its own without revealing them. And as for who is struggling with “strings attached”… at first one thinks that these bind Jeremy only, and then it becomes clear later on that everyone, except Arthur, in the story struggles against them, because every major theme in the story–beauty, wealth, love, betrayal, lust, greed and temptation–has consequences, or “strings,” attached to it.
Question: Nick, who is your target audience? Who would enjoy reading your book?
Nick Nolan: Initially my target audience was youngish gay men, but I’ve been pleasantly surprised that the appeal of Strings Attached crosses boundaries of age and gender and sexual preference… probably because it’s a coming-of-age story; this particular genre endures because those years are burned into every adult’s psyche. And who doesn’t relate to struggle, and misfortune, and learning to stand up for yourself? Enjoying a good read has little to do with how old you are or whom you sleep with–everyone loves a page-turner when the hero stands victorious at the end.
(This author Q&A; is adapted from an author interview conducted by Juanita Watson, Assistant Editor of Reader Views, and is republished with permission.)

Review

“Strings Attached is the literary equivalent of a prime-time soap opera…readers will have no trouble turning the pages of this engrossing novel…an easy book to get sucked into.” –PHILADELPHIA GAY NEWS

“Beautifully told, it grabs at your heart and emotions and does not let go…Nolan’s language is lush and his description is beautiful … His book is one to cherish and hold onto. We shall not see many like it.” –Amos Lassen, LITERARY PRIDE

“Strings Attached is a wonderful story…a multifaceted piece of fiction dealing with co-dependency, parent-child relationships, anger, violence, love, sexual exploration, and maturation…This is a fast read.” –Rich Wiesenthal, DIVERSITY RULES MAGAZINE

“Nolan’s debut novel is a kitchen sink of genres – coming of age, coming out, mystery, romance, erotica, even a dash of the supernatural – that add up to an impressive story about the passage from boyhood to manhood.” –Richard Labonte, BOOKS TO WATCH OUT FOR

See all Editorial Reviews


Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 471 KB
  • Print Length: 320 pages
  • Publisher: AmazonEncore; Unabridged edition (March 9, 2010)

Here’s a quick free read (or text-to-speech listen) for your commute, just a little something to whet your appetite for the full release of J.A. Konrath’s latest Jack Daniels mystery, Shaken, which will be published initially in a Kindle exclusive by AmazonEncore this Fall and is available, at least for now, at a pre-order price of $2.99. I don’t ordinarily include many “free samples” in the Kindle Nation Daily Free Book Alerts because many of them are just trying to game the bestseller lists through the redundancy of offering something that is already free as a Kindle Store free sample. But when a teaser like Konrath’s comes out while the full ebook is still in its unreleased pre-order state, as in this case, a worthwhile purpose is served.

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Daughter of Joy (Brides of Culdee Creek, Book 1) (Kindle Edition)

by Kathleen Morgan (Author)

4.5 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)


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Rage of Angels (Kindle Edition)

by Sidney Sheldon (Author)

4.7 out of 5 stars  (81 customer reviews)


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Steve Martini’s Shadow of Power Free with Bonus Material

by Steve Martini – Pre-order for May 25, 2010 Release

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Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers
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  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 655 KB
  • Simultaneous Device Usage: Up to 5 simultaneous devices, per publisher limits
  • Publisher: HarperCollins e-books (May 25, 2010)
  • Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers

The Truth About Negotiations by Leigh L. Thompson

Product Description

On the road to forever, anything goes-
An Out of Uniform story.
Carson Scott is the king of one-night stands, so a naughty encounter with a sexy brunette in a nightclub supply closet is right up his alley. When his mysterious seductress disappears, he-s blindsided by an unfamiliar emotion-disappointment. One thing-s for sure-if he ever encounters his lady of the evening again, he won-t let her slip away so easily.
Between her catering business, family issues, and her broken heart, Holly Lawson has too much on her plate to think about committing to a serious relationship. Hot, sweaty, anonymous sex with a Navy SEAL-now that sounds like the perfect appetizer to take the edge off. With no plans to ever see him again, she indulges in a fling. Only to come face to face with him weeks later while working a wedding.
Worse, Carson is hell-bent on the one thing she doesn-t want. The R word. She has no intention of falling for him, but in the face of his seductive, mind-changing methods, her resistance is crumbling-
Warning: This title contains a ridiculously hot Navy SEAL, a sassy heroine, and sex in a supply closet. Read only if you have time to take a cold shower afterwards. Graphic sex, explicit language.

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