Thursday, December 30, 2010

Now Available: Lending for Some Kindle Books

Now Available: Lending for Some Kindle Books

Amazon has kept its promise to make Kindle books available for lending before the end of 2010 -- without 36 hours to spare!

The new enhancement has just been announced and, with many publishers blocking the feature, it is currently available for a limited number of titles. To find out if a title that you already own is available for lending, look it up under "Your Orders" on your Manage Your Kindle page and look for the "Loan this book" button at the bottom left, as shown in this screenshot. Prior to purchasing a book, you can check to see if Lending is enabled under Product Details, where it will either say Lending: Enabled, or nothing at all on the subject.



Here's Amazon's presentation on the new lending feature, from the company's website:

Lending Kindle Books

Eligible Kindle books can be loaned once for a period of 14 days. The borrower does not need to own a Kindle -- Kindle books can also be read using our free Kindle reading applications for PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone, BlackBerry, and Android devices. Not all books are lendable -- it is up to the publisher or rights holder to determine which titles are eligible for lending. The lender will not be able to read the book during the loan period.


Finding Lendable Books

Titles that are eligible for lending, as determined by the publisher or rights holder, will have a message on the product detail page. Scroll down to the "Product Details" section and look for "Lending: Enabled" as shown below:
For titles you already own, you can check the Your Orders section in Manage Your Kindle. Click the "+" symbol next to a title to reveal additional information about the title. If lending is enabled, you'll see a Loan this book button next to the product image.

Loaning a Kindle Book

You can initiate a loan from Manage Your Kindle or the book's product detail page on Amazon.com. You'll enter the borrower's name and e-mail address and an optional notification message. Your recipient can receive the book loan even if they do not yet have a Kindle or Kindle reading application.
From Manage Your Kindle:
Manage Your Kindle lists all of your Kindle content purchases under the Your Orders section.
  1. Click the "+" symbol next to a title to reveal all information and options. If lending is enabled, you'll see a Loan this book button next to the product image.
  2. Click the Loan this book button.
  3. You'll be directed to a form where you'll provide the borrower's name, e-mail address and an optional message.
From the product detail page of a book you have already purchased:
When logged in to your Amazon account and looking at the product detail page of a book you have already purchased, a notification at the top of the page will indicate that you already own the title. If lending for the book is enabled, you'll see a second notice: "Loan this book to anyone you choose."
  1. Click the Loan this book link.
  2. You'll be directed to a form where you'll provide the borrower's name, e-mail address and an optional message (as shown above).
Your loan recipient will be notified of the loan through the e-mail address you provide. The borrower has seven days to accept the loan.
If the loan is not accepted after seven days, the book will become available again through your Archived Items.  You can also attempt to loan the book again at that time.
If the borrower already owns the title, or the title is not available in the borrower's country due to copyright restrictions, the borrower will not be able to accept the loan.  In these cases the lender will be able to read and loan the book again after the seven day period has ended.

Receiving a Kindle Book Loan

If someone has loaned you a Kindle book, you will receive an e-mail notification allowing you to download the book to your Kindle device or free Kindle reading application. After accepting the loan, you'll have 14 days to enjoy the book until the download ends.
To download a Kindle book loan:
  1. Open the e-mail message you received about your book loan and click the Get your loaned book now button. Your web browser will launch and automatically direct you to Amazon.com to accept the loan.
  2. Log into your Amazon.com account if prompted, or create one if you are not yet an Amazon.com customer. You may also be prompted to enter a billing address to verify your location only (there is no charge associated with accepting a Kindle book loan.)
  3. If you are already a Kindle user, just select the device that you would like the book delivered to from the drop-down menu and click the Accept button.
  4. If you do not yet have a Kindle or Kindle reading application, click the Accept button and you will be taken through the steps to download a free reading application.  After downloading a reading application you will need to return to the e-mail message and accept the loan.
Tip: You have seven days from when you first received your e-mail about the book load to accept the loan. Once you accept, you have 14 days before the loan expires.

Frequently Asked Questions

As the lender, can I read the book while it is out on loan?

Once you initiate a Kindle book loan, you will not be able to read the book until the loan period has ended, after which your access will automatically be restored. 
Once your notification has been sent, a reminder message will appear on the Home screen of your Kindle or Kindle reading app, indicating that the book is on loan and cannot be read until the loan has ended.
During the loan period the book will still remain visible in your Archived Items folder, but you will be unable to redownload the title.

Will I be notified before the book loan expires?

Yes. Three days before the end of the 14-day loan period we will send borrowers a courtesy reminder e-mail about the loan expiration.  Once the loan period has ended, an e-mail notification will be sent to both the book lender and borrower. The lender can then access the book again through their Archived Items and Manage Your Kindle.
The borrower will receive a notice on the Home screen of their device indicating that the loan has ended.  The borrower will still be able to view the title from their Archived Items folder as well, but selecting the title will bring up a reminder that the loan has ended and provide a link to purchase the item.
If the recipient is finished with the loaned book and wishes to return it, they can do so from the Your Orders section of Manage Your Kindle.  Here's how:
  1. Click the "+" symbol next to the loaned title.
  2. Click the Delete this Title button.
  3. Click Yes in the pop-over window to confirm the return.
After initiating a return the reading rights will be restored to the owner of the book. The owner will also receive an e-mail confirmation of the return.

How do I view the status of my loan?

You can view the status of a Kindle book loan from the Manage Your Kindle page. Click on the "+" symbol next to any title to view more details about any book that you've loaned or borrowed.
If you've loaned out the book, you'll see the loan date listed, as well as whether the loan is pending, the expiration date of an accepted loan, or the returned date.
Borrowers will be able to see how much longer a loan is available, or if it has ended.

Is lending available internationally?

At this time, Kindle book lending can only be initiated by customers residing in the United States.  If a loan is initiated to a customer outside the United States, the borrower may not be able to accept the loan if the title is not available in their country due to publisher geographical rights.
In these cases the borrower will be notified of this during the Loan redemption process, and the book reading and lending rights will return to the lender at the end of seven days from loan initiation.  You can always check the status of a loan by viewing the book on the Manage Your Kindle page.

This eBook Is Too Darned Cheap: Heidegger's Glasses

Featuring Books Far More Worthy 
Than Their Price Tags Indicat
Heidegger's Glasses is such a wonderful book I should burn in Hades for getting it for free.  If you're lucky, author Thaisa Frank will put a price tag on it and save you the guilt before you download it.

The story line is utterly different from the same-old same-old we gefrom our beloved bestsellers at the top of the paid list.  Set in Nazi Germany in 1943, we meet Elie Schaten, a rescuer of huma"vermin" the Gestapo want to destroy.

The action centers on The Compound, an underground bunker 30 feet beneath a fake shepherd's hut, where prisoners spared from the gas chambers answer letters from dead people to be read by other dead people.  It is all part of an historically accurate and typically bizarre Nazi attempt to cover up the horrors of the concentration camps with a "paper trail" of correspondence between supposedly happy camp occupants.

Enter the underground chamber of horrors, where the Scribes in their strange ways try to tilt the universe back into balance.  On this teeter-totter, the insanity of the Third Reich can only be counter-weighted with insanity of equal gravity, if not gravitas.

The glory of this book is revelation of the indomitable human spirit, which will adopt insane behavior so it can adapt and balance the board of reality.

Thaisa Frank adeptly draws the reader into the mind-set of The Compound's inhabitants with skilled writing and what the New York Times called "a tantalizing sense of indirection."  


Even with the artful elimination of quotation marks removes the reader to a place inside the story.  So used are we readers to the  "  and the  "  to delineate dialog, and so quickly we abandon our little reality under the author's guiding hand.  Once past the first set of missing quote marks, Dear Reader, and you are lost into the world of the Scribes.  


The horror of the Holocaust, the desperation of a Germany falling apart as it loses the war, the fear of the victims and the desperation of their tormentors is revealed not by direct view, but reflected in the haunted souls of the characters.

Interspersed throughout the book are reproductions of the heart-shattering letters written in the 1940s as part of the cover-up.

More than a horror story, or a war story, Heidegger's Glasses reveals a solemn truth obscured by Nietsche's usual aphorism that "what does not kill me makes me stronger."  The truth:  What does not destroy me, though I survive, scars me and changes me..but I survive and go forward, though as a different person.

To preserve your own balance of rightness is this world, Dear Reader, do grab Heidegger's Glasses now while it is free.   It has no right to remain so for long.  Then buy the hard cover at $16.99.

Authors such as Frank must be fed, and we can do so only by paying for her book.  We definitely want to fund this talent so she will continue to provide books of this caliber.


Don't take our word for it.  Listen:  "The fiction of Thaisa Frank, according to the New York Times, works by "a tantalizing sense of indirection." Of her debut novel HEIDEGGER'S GLASSES Dan Chaon says "This is stunning work, full of mystery and strange tenderness. Thaisa Frank has written one of the most compelling stories of the Nazi Regime since D.M. Thomas's PICTURES AT AN EXHIBITION. It is a book that will haunt you." Jim Moret of The Huffington Post has called it a "tour de force." And Publishers Weekly's starred review described Frank's vision of the Holocaust original and startling." 

Visit the author's Amazon Author's Page here


And her web site, here.





Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Planet iPad's Daily Free Book Alert, Wednesday, December 29: Could you live "Happily Ever After" with a mysterious drifter? plus ... Laugh away the post-holiday blues with Stilettos No More by Diana Estill (Today's Sponsor)

Daily Free Book Alert, Wednesday, December 29: Could you live "Happily Ever After" with a mysterious drifter? plus ...a reviewer says "buckle up and enjoy the ride" driven by The Father's Child (SPONSOR)


When Mona Reynolds hires mysterious drifter Joe Michaels to be her handyman, she discovers that it isn't only in fairy tales that people live "happily ever after," in today's latest addition to our 225+ Free Book Alert listings....


But first, a word from ... Today's Sponsor

John Truman, a bright, introverted, college student belongs to the New Dawn...he just doesn't know it yet

The Father's Child
by Mark Adair
5.0 Stard  -  3 Reviews
Speech-to-Text:  Enabled

Here's the set-up:

The 300-year-old, Oxford-based, secret society designed him, created him, and built their organization to interface with him. They cannot survive without him; he cannot survive without them. All he wants is to get through today; all they want...is to rule the world.

Reviewer D.J. Bowd says:  "Adair is a master at witty dialogs, artful descriptions and teasing the reader with seeds of fore-shadowing. The story is filled with twists and turns, and fun surprises from beginning to end; a masterful plot that continues to develop all the way to an exciting and unexpected conclusion.  Buckle up, fire up your Kindle, and enjoy the ride!"

From the Author:

When I first began "The Father's Child" I had only the idea of a socially-challenged college guy named John Truman who had some interesting friends. Not knowing where the story or the characters might be going, I slowly churned out a chapter here and there. A few chapters and a couple months into it the idea for the New Dawn, a secret Oxford society, formed. Like the proverbial light bulb going on I understood the characters and their mission in life. Everything fit together.

I wrote the first draft in about ten months. After feedback from critique friends and my inner-critiquer, I reworked and rewrote 5 or 6 more times before I thought it was acceptable. A few more rewrites and I started thinking "this is pretty darn good." I still remember the time I read through the last several chapters without slowing down. Obviously, I knew the plot and the characters intimately. Even so I found myself caught up in the story and the lives of those involved.

Cheers!


 Click hereto download The Father's Child or a free sample to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

UK Kindle customers: Click here to download
Each day's list is sponsored by one paid title. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them. 

Authors, Publishers, iPad Accessory Manufacturers:
Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information



Free Contemporary Titles in the Kindle Store

HOW TO USE OUR NEW FREE BOOK TOOL:

Just use the slider at right of your screen below to scroll through a complete, updated list of free contemporary Kindle titles, and click on an icon like this one (at right) to read a free sample right here in your browser! Titles are sorted in reverse chronological order so you can easily see new freebies!

Daily Free Book Alert, Wednesday, December 29: Could you live "Happily Ever After" with a mysterious drifter? plus ... Laugh away the post-holiday blues withStilettos No More by Diana Estill (Today's Sponsor)

Daily Free Book Alert, Wednesday, December 29: Could you live "Happily Ever After" with a mysterious drifter? plus ... Laugh away the post-holiday blues withStilettos No More by Diana Estill (Today's Sponsor)

When Mona Reynolds hires mysterious drifter Joe Michaels to be her handyman, she discovers that it isn't only in fairy tales that people live "happily ever after," in this morning's latest addition to our 225+ Free Book Alert listings....


But first, a word from ... Today's Sponsor

John Truman, a bright, introverted, college student belongs to the New Dawn...he just doesn't know it yet
The Father's Child
by Mark Adair
5.0 Stard  -  3 Reviews

Kindle Price:  $2.99
Speech-to-Text:  Enabled

Here's the set-up:

The 300-year-old, Oxford-based, secret society designed him, created him, and built their organization to interface with him. They cannot survive without him; he cannot survive without them. All he wants is to get through today; all they want...is to rule the world.

Reviewer D.J. Bowd says:  "Adair is a master at witty dialogs, artful descriptions and teasing the reader with seeds of fore-shadowing. The story is filled with twists and turns, and fun surprises from beginning to end; a masterful plot that continues to develop all the way to an exciting and unexpected conclusion.  Buckle up, fire up your Kindle, and enjoy the ride!"

From the Author:

When I first began "The Father's Child" I had only the idea of a socially-challenged college guy named John Truman who had some interesting friends. Not knowing where the story or the characters might be going, I slowly churned out a chapter here and there. A few chapters and a couple months into it the idea for the New Dawn, a secret Oxford society, formed. Like the proverbial light bulb going on I understood the characters and their mission in life. Everything fit together.

I wrote the first draft in about ten months. After feedback from critique friends and my inner-critiquer, I reworked and rewrote 5 or 6 more times before I thought it was acceptable. A few more rewrites and I started thinking "this is pretty darn good." I still remember the time I read through the last several chapters without slowing down. Obviously, I knew the plot and the characters intimately. Evenso I found myself caught up in the story and the lives of those involved.

Cheers!


 Click hereto download Vestal Virgin or a free sample to your Kindle, iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, BlackBerry, Android-compatible, PC or Mac and start reading within 60 seconds!

UK Kindle customers: Click here to download
Each day's list is sponsored by one paid title. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them. 

Authors, Publishers, iPad Accessory Manufacturers:
Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information



Free Contemporary Titles in the Kindle Store

HOW TO USE OUR NEW FREE BOOK TOOL:

Just use the slider at right of your screen below to scroll through a complete, updated list of free contemporary Kindle titles, and click on an icon like this one (at right) to read a free sample right here in your browser! Titles are sorted in reverse chronological order so you can easily see new freebies!