Showing posts with label authors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label authors. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

In Memorium Senator Edward M. "Ted" Kennedy

Condolences are streaming in from leaders around the world at the news that Senator Edward M. "Ted" Kennedy has died. He expired late Tuesday night after a long bout with glioblastoma, a terminal form of brain cancer. Although the senator's passing was not unexpected, there is a deep sense of loss in the world today as we remember the ways in which, directly or indirectly, he touched so many lives.

There will be no shortage of testimonials in the coming days and weeks, but I think none will be any more heartfelt than these remarks by Vice President Joe Biden, a long-time colleague and friend of the late senator. Born to a wealthy family, Kennedy could have sided with privilege and special interests, but chose instead to fight for the common man, a champion not only of the Democratic Party, but of the principles of democracy.





During his 47-year career in the United States Senate, Kennedy authored over 2500 bills, and ironically was working on an overhaul of the 1971 National Cancer Act when his condition was diagnosed. There is no question that health-care reform was among his top priorities, not only in the current congress, but over the past 40 years. You can review his record at his official U.S. Senate site, or share your condolences at TedKennedy.org. The family has requested that in lieu of flowers, mourners consider a contribution for educational programming to The Edward M. Kennedy Institute for the United States Senate.

Kennedy will be sorely missed as a statesman who promoted true bipartisanship, unlike the Republican concept, which is to do as they say or listen to them whine. De Facto Republican point-man Rush Limbaugh even went so far as to declare that any bill coming out of the congress should be called the "Ted Kennedy Memorial Health Care Bill.".

Make no mistake: the Republican plan is to derail health-care reform at any cost, and to maintain a dysfunctional status quo that favors their fat cat insurance contributors. Tastelessness and rabble-rousing aside, their talking points make no sense: Obama is a Nazi and simultaneously a Socialist. A public insurance option would be grossly mismanaged, and simultaneously drive all private insurers out of business. A deficit-neutral health care package would ruin the economy (this from the party that drove the economy into the ditch with two completely unfunded wars and a big-pharma boondoggle prescription drug benefit.)

Economists agree that the tax cuts Republicans insisted upon as a condition for passing the desperately needed economic stimulus package have gone straight into savings, benefitting only the banking industry, and that the package was too small. The Republicans have taken your job. Do you now want to trust them with your life? If, like so many, you can't afford a cash contribution, I suggest that a fitting memorial would be to take up the torch and finish the work Kennedy started. Learn the facts about health care reform. Pick up the phone, knock on some doors, write your congressman. "Yes, we can!"

Sunday, February 01, 2009

Legend of the Seeker

Perhaps you were too busy with your preparations for Halloween or the presidential election to notice the debut of the new Disney/ABC Domestic Television series "The Legend of the Seeker".based on Terry Goodkind's epic fantasy series, "The Sword of Truth"

Executive producers Sam Raimi and Rob Tapert certainly have the necessary experience to bring this series to the small screen, having collaborated on "Hercules: The Legendary Journeys" and "Xena: Warrior Princess". (Both are available from Anchor Bay Entertainment.) The wild New Zealand locations are, as always, perfect for the genre.

Goodkind has resisted selling the screen rights to the "Sword of Truth" franchise in the past, but agreed to the ABC/Disney deal because he was convinced that their treatment would be true to the original characters and stories. That is not to say that the TV series is a direct retelling of the stories in the books, so reading them will not necessarily "spoil" the television experience.

These twelve books in the Sword of Truth series are also available as mass-market paperbacks:

  1. Wizard's First Rule
  2. Stone of Tears
  3. Blood of the Fold
  4. Temple of the Winds
  5. Soul of the Fire
  6. Faith of the Fallen
  7. The Pillars of Creation
  8. Naked Empire
  9. Chainfire (Chainfire Trilogy Book 1)
  10. Phantom (Chainfire Trilogy Book 2)
  11. Confessor (Chainfire Trilogy Book 3)
  12. Debt of Bones (Sword of Truth Prequel)

One of the challenges of adapting a story into a television series is to create reasonably complete story lines for each episode while continuing to advance the plot of the overall saga. ABC has provided some help here by making full versions of the first season episodes available online as well as a documentary Legend of the Seeker: A First Look as a free download on iTunes

Here are links to the first nine Legend of the Seeker installments with a very brief synopsis just to remind you of which one goes with which title:

  1. Prophecy/Destiny

    Episodes 1 & 2 are combined, perhaps because they introduce the premise for the series. Simple woodsman Richard Cypher learns that it has been prophesied theat he will become The Seeker, "a hero who arises in the times of trouble and suffering and seeks out evil." We meet Kahlan Amnell, a sort of beneficent priestess or Confessor sworn to protect the Seeker, and Zeddicus Zu'l Zorander, a powerful wizard who is secretly Richard's real grandfather.

  2. Bounty

    Evil D'Haran Emperor Darken Rahl puts a price on Richard's head and magical maps that track his location are distributed.

  3. Brennidon

    Richard's birthplace is captured by Darken Rahl's D'Haran hoardes, and his supposed mother held captive.

  4. Listener

    Our heroes save a boy named Renn from Rahl who naturally wants to use the boy's psychic abilities for evil.

  5. Elixir

    When their horses are stolen, Zedd must defeat his former student, Jeziah.

  6. Identity

    After having a vision of Richard's death, the sorceress Shota magically exchanges his identity and that of a merchant's son, Gryff.

  7. Denna

    We learn of Denna and her Mord'Sith sisters -- a cult of evil dominatrices who are apparently Darken Rahl's answer to the Confessors. Richard kills Denna, but she'll be back.

  8. Puppeteer

    Zedd poses as a puppeteer to obtain the third Box of Orden, one of a set of magical items Rahl desperately desires to posesss.

  9. Sacrifice

    Well, well. Kahlan's sister isn't dead after all, and she's at least eight months pregnant. This can't be good.

  10. Confession

    Somebody's using a magical orb to cover up the murder of members of the D'Haran resistance.

  11. Home

    Release Date: 21 February 2009

  12. Revenant

    Release Date: 28 February 2009

  13. Hartland

    Release Date: 7 March 2009

  14. Conversion

    Release Date: 14 March 2009

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

Reiki Resources @ Amazon.com

Introduction

Reiki (pronounced ray-kee) is a Japanese system of energy healing originated by Mikao Usui in 1922, as well as the "Universal Life Force" used in these techniques. The word is derived from rei (spirit) and ki (life force). The term ki (also transliterated chi and qi) will be familiar to those versed in traditional chinese medicine, particulary acupuncture and acupressure, and is in fact borrowed from the Chinese.

Usui lived only four years after founding the Usui Reiki Ryoho Gakkai (Usui Reiki Healing Society) in Tokyo in 1922. His work was then carried on by his student, Chujiro Hayashi, who simplified and codified the teachings while focussing more on physical healing.

Hayashi's student Hawayo Takata is credited with introducing Reiki to the West. Travelling extensively in the U.S., Takata stressed the importance of charging money for Reiki treatments and teachings. Given the common inversion of the law of supply and demand in the U.S. (the more something costs, the more it's worth) this may have been useful. Almost all Reiki taught outside Japan can be attributed to her work.

John Harvey Gray was the third Reiki master trained by Takata to carry on that tradition, and is the longest-practicing Reiki Master Instructor in the West. Today there are many Reiki practitioners and instructors, each with their own empahses. Each has their adherents, and this brief discussion of the history of the tradition is not meant to imply the superiority of "pure" Reiki as handed down from Usui, but merely to outline the foundations of the practice.

Foundational Works on Reiki

Background

There is clearly a difference between living organisms and those which have expired, although the exact nature of the change defies scientific elucidation. There might well be a "Universal Life Energy," like Reiki just beyond the reach of our current technology. In the horror classic Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, this mysterious life-force was the then new and fascinating phenomenon of electricity. As mentioned earlier, the Chinese call it chi. It has also been referred to as ether, "the force," holy spirit, kundalini, mana, pneuma, prana, qudra, orgone, ruach, and silla as well as other names. ( For further information on these phenomena, you might want to consult Stefan Stenudd's Life Energy Encyclopedia)

Like Reiki, many of the systems that posit these life energies maintain that they reside in nodes -- most often referred to by the Hindu term chakras. They also maintain that this energy can be strengthened and balanced by various means. In the case of Reiki, the practitioner uses certain hand placements and positions on or just above the subject's body. The Reiki energy is said to flow from the practitioner's hands into the subject, stimulating the natural healing process. Subjects generally report feelings of tingling or warmth in the affected area, along with a sense of deep relaxation and well-being.

Training

Reiki training is divided into three levels or degrees. The first degree training, which typically takes only about two days, teaches the basic theory and hand placements used in Reiki. Students are given four "attunements" by a third degree (or master level) trainer. After recieving this basic reiki training, the student can treat herself or others.

The second degree Reiki training intoduces the use of symbols to enhance the strength of the Reiki energy and the distance over which it can be exerted. A fourth attunement is given, empowering students to use these symbols and enhancing their capacity for the flow of Reiki through them.

The third, or Master, degree of Reiki training involves one or more additional attunements, and a master-level symbol. Upon completeing the master training, one can teach the three levels of Reiki training and give the necessary attunements.

Since its introduction, many variations of the Reiki training have arisen, and there is considerable disagreement over what constitutes Reiki. Basically, the practice is what it is, and experience should dictate whether one chooses to incorporate a particular variation or not. There are, of course those who maintain that only one particular style or another should be called Reiki. Since there is no accreditation body for Reiki, this difference of opinion is unlikely to be resolved.

Reiki Listmania

A good way to approach an unfamiliar subject using Amazon.com as a source is to look over the Listmania® lists users have contributed. There may be disagreements within the Amazon community, as in society at large, but there is usually enough additional information to help you decide whose opinion you would value most.

Below are some of the many Reiki Listmanias chosen primarily for the quantity of additional information they present:

Reiki Forum

Amazon supports little-known (and under-utilized) forums where customers can exchange ideas on topics that interest them. Given the level of interest in Reiki demonstrated by reviewers, there really should be more going on at theReiki Forum, but that is subject to change!

People

Another neglected part of the Amazon site is their social networking pages. Even if you've never bought anything from Amazon.com, you can create an Amazon account and you will get a profile page where you can include as much (or as little) information about yourself as you wish. Here are some interesting people who have created Amazon content about Reiki:

Books

If you've looked at the Listmania pages above, you've discovered that there are a number of books that are "standards" mentioned in almost every case. (If you haven't checked out these lists, you should -- their authors are much more knowledgable about Reiki than I am.) I'm listing some of those here, as well as some that are a little more specialized, although they are not necessarily for advanced students only:

Please note that this is just a sampling of all the Reiki Books at Amazon. There are always new ones being published, and older titles may be reprinted or rediscovered by new audiences, so it's a good idea to do a little searching on your own. If you're really interested in the topic, you might invest in The Reiki Sourcebook or the Reiki News Magazine to aid you in furher research.

Selected DVDs by Steve Murray

Most Reiki practioners would agree that live training is preferable to books or DVDs. Nonetheless, many have recommended these DVDs. They can certainly at least serve as an easy and inexpensive introduction to Reiki. If you find they fully meet your needs, so much the better.

Caveats

Western science tends to have a blind spot with respect to many techniques of alternative medicine. Since science, by definition, deals with measurable and reproduceable experimental data, it is limited by the current state of the art in instrumentation. Phenomena that are not currently measurable can neither be proven nor disproven scientifically -- they simply lie outside the domain of current scientific discipline.

This has unfortunately contributed to the bias of Western medicine toward becoming a "disease care system" relying heavily on highly invasive, but scientifically verifiable therapies, primarily pharmaceticals and surgery. Disease prevention and the positive promotion of health, even through such acknowledged methods as proper diet and exercise has been neglected almost to the point of complete exclusion. The message seems to be that one can engage in all manner of stressful and self-destructive lifestyle choices, then take the appropriate pill to continue on one's reckless course.

There is a great deal of merit to many "alternative" techniques such as Reiki, but let the buyer beware, because the lack of scientific verification also permits considerable latitude and even downright fraud. For a reasonably balanced view of the merits of various holistic therapies, you might refer to Andrew Weil, M.D., a respected practitioner of western medicine as well as numerous alternative techniques who calls his approach integrative medicine.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Author Mania!

Even though the Dewey decimal system and Library of Congress taxonomies have categories for fiction writing, most libraries arrange their fiction books alphabetically by author. This is a very workable solution for most people. It's simple and straightforward and gives due weight to the fact that people who like an author's books are likely to read more of them.

Amazon.com follows the same procedure ... sort of. If you search for an author's name, you will generally get some pretty good results but mixed with some extraneous "hits" on people with the same first or last names. If you drill down far enough, you may find that your favorite author is one of Amazon's featured authors, and you will find far fewer of these similarly named results on these category pages.

That was the inspiration for my Author Mania aStore. As I got furhter into it, I realized that there was a need for (at least) two more "author" stores, Author Mania II, and Author Mania Too. (Amazon aStores are limited to "only" 999 categories per store.)

•   Author Mania Too
          •   All Featured Authors
•   Author Mania
          •   American Literature Classics
          •   British Literature Classics
          •   Comics & Graphic Novels
          •   Horror
          •   Mysteries & Thrillers
          •   Sci-Fi & Fantasy
          •   Teen & Young Adult
•   Author Mania II
          •   Children's Books
          •   Playwrights
          •   Poets
          •   Romance

Monday, April 21, 2008

New aStore: Author Mania - Popular Fiction Book Categories @ Amazon.com

Most libraries divide their books into fiction and nonfiction, arranging the nonfiction by topic and the fiction alphabetically by author. Amazon.com does something similar, although their reliance on their internal search function makes the relevant links links pretty obscure. You can always search for your favorite authors within their Literature and Fiction category, but you are liable to get a lot of extraneous results (like all authors with the same first or last name!)

Alternatively, you can drill down to their author pages which feature selected authors in selected fiction genres. This produces considerably more relevant results, although there are still some occasional glitches. Our Author Mania aStore is designed to make it easy to find books by your favorite authors. Because the aStore format only allows searching within the top two categories, each of the top-level categories below contains a somewhat unwieldy list of authors, but they're in alphabetical order, so just take a deep breath and scroll down...

As of this posting, this store is still "under construction," and is rapidly approaching Amazon's 999-category limit. Accordingly, there are currently (and perhaps permanently) no subcategories under some of the top-level categories below:

Author Mania





Friday, February 29, 2008

William F. Buckley, Jr. (1925 - 2008)

Author and political commentator William F. Buckley, Jr. was found dead in the study of his Stamford, Connecticut home yesterday, apparently of natural causes. The sixth of ten children of Irish-Catholic lawyer and oil baron William F. Buckley, Sr. the 82-year-old Buckley served as a second lietenant during World War II. At war's end, he studied political science, history and economics at Yale where he was a star debater, joined the secret Skull and Bones society, and served as the chairman of the Yale Daily News.

After graduating with honors in 1950, Buckley wrote God and Man at Yale, the first of what would be over fifty books on a variety of subjects, and served briefly in the C.I.A. and as an editor of The American Mercury in 1951 & 1952. After leaving The Mercury over its percieved anti-semitic tendencies, Buckley founded conservative magazine The National Review in 1955. While at the helm of The Review, Buckley became known for his fusion of American conservative politics with libertarian economics, and had an acknowledged influence on such conservative icons as Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan.

In 1965, Buckley began a syndicated column, "On the Right", which at its height ran in 320 newspapers. To those outside the conservative movement, Buckley is best known as the host of 1504 installments of the PBS series Firing Line. Unlike the current crop of "conservative" pundits -- the Bill O'Reillys, Rush Limbaughs, and Ann Coulters of the world -- Buckley generally eschewed ad hominem attacks (except for his uncharacteristic feud with Gore Vidal) relying instead on a journalist's regard for facts and a debater's skill in logic. Nor was he a lock-step Republican -- deviating from the party line on such subjects as drug legalization, smoking bans, and the Iraq War. Although one might not always have agreed with Buckley (he was after all more conservative than most) one had to respect his erudite, principled, and internally consistent positions which contributed greatly to the nation's political dialogue and will be sorely missed.

William F. Buckley Listmania

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Author Mania: Teen / Young Adult (A - D)

Most libraries have separate children's departments and frequently a teen / young adult section. Amazon.com is no different. Deciding what qualifies as teen reading is an inexact science at best -- especially since the teen years include everything from middle school to college. I don't know if I would have included Camus and Dostoevsky here, for example. Nonetheless, these are the selections Amazon.com features, and I hope you will find them helpful.

Teen / Young Adult Authors (A - D)

Author Mania: Teen / Young Adult (E - Ma)

Most libraries have separate children's departments and frequently a teen / young adult section. Amazon.com is no different. Deciding what qualifies as teen reading is an inexact science at best -- especially since the teen years include everything from middle school to college. I don't know if I would have included Camus and Dostoevsky here, for example. Nonetheless, these are the selections Amazon.com features, and I hope you will find them helpful.

Teen / Young Adult Authors (E - Ma)

Author Mania: Teen / Young Adult (Mc - Z)

Most libraries have separate children's departments and frequently a teen / young adult section. Amazon.com is no different. Deciding what qualifies as teen reading is an inexact science at best -- especially since the teen years include everything from middle school to college. I don't know if I would have included Camus and Dostoevsky here, for example. Nonetheless, these are the selections Amazon.com features, and I hope you will find them helpful.

Teen / Young Adult Authors (Mc - Z)

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Perricone's 10 Recommended Supplements @ Amazon.com

There is a tremendous amount of confusion surrounding nutritional supplements, due in part to the FDA's bizzare regulatons for these products. Conspiracy buffs may want to read Kevin Trudeau's popular Natural Cures "They" Don't Want You To Know About, although listening to his ubiquitous infomercial is sufficient to get the gist of the problem.

Given that one risks prosecution for practicing medicine without a license even for making accurate statements about the uses and properties of supplements, where can one hope to find reliable information? One excellent source is the handful of practicing physicians who incorporate supplements in their practice.

You may have seen The University Lecture Series with Dr. Nicholas Perricone during PBS "pledge week" or any of Dr. Perricones's books or other DVD's. Perricone is a dermatologist, so perhaps it is understandable that he emphasizes the effects of these products on healthy, youthful-looking skin, although I personally find The Brain-Beauty Connection more compelling. In any case, his audience seems very receptive.

The list below comes from my notes on the PBS program, and a little further research will convince you that there is considerable consensus that these are the basic supplements anyone should consider, with the possible exception of Maitake SX Fraction, which has a specific (although very common) indication.

Much has been said about the quality of supplement products. Undoubtedly, some are better than others, and tend to be more expensive. However, higher price is no guarantee of quality. I feel that even the cheapest brands are "better than nothing," if you are trying something to see if it seems beneficial. If you decide to add a supplement to your regular regimen, you can do a little further research into which brands are best.

Dr. Perricone markets his own brand of supplements, which I'm sure are very high-quality. They are by no means cheap.

Perricone's Top 10 Recommended Supplements





Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Top Listmania!(TM) Lists: All Categories

Amazon publishes a list of "Top Listmania Lists," but it's not entirely clear how these lists are rated. Ratings don't seem to be based on helpful votes or number of times read -- at least not entirely. I suspect they are rated largely according to their conversion rates -- how likely readers are to actually purchase items from the list. That would certainly make sense from Amazon's point of view, and come to think of it, mine too.

For the most part these lists supply additional information beyond just the automatic pictures, prices, and links to product pages. Whether you find this information credible or not is your call, but apparently others have found it helpful, and that is a big plus!

  1. Some Cookbooks for a Creole or Cajun Kitchen
  2. My favorite Bond movies!
  3. Nick Hornby and Company!
  4. Doctor Who - Sixth Doctor (Baker Seasons 21-23)
  5. The Poetry of Ryokan
  6. Cool Passions I Profess
  7. Recommended Tanka Poetry Books
  8. Kanshi
  9. Refined Kabbalah
  10. Japanese Poetry
  11. Buddhism & Women - The Feminine
  12. The U.S. invasion of Vietnam
  13. Ryokan's poetry
  14. Haiku
  15. Zen Buddhism: Old-Style
  16. Japanese Novels and Stories in Good English
  17. Doctor Who - Third Doctor (Pertwee Seasons 7-11)
  18. Koto and Shakuhachi
  19. Doctor Who - Seventh Doctor (McCoy Seasons 24-26)
  20. Fun books about Chickens
  21. Top Ten UNIT Operations (Doctor Who)
  22. Issa - Haiku Poet
  23. Doctor Who - Fifth Doctor (Davison Seasons 19-21)
  24. Historical Fiction set in Asia (includes India)
  25. Off the Beaten Path in Historical Fiction
  26. Beautiful Kyoto
  27. Dharma Bum Inspiration
  28. Candlemaking Mysteries by Tim Myers
  29. Hanshan - Cold Mountain Poems
  30. Appreciation for Sanford Goldstein
  31. HK Fantasy
  32. Best Books I've Read This Year
  33. Buson - Haiku Poet and Painter
  34. Some Great Burton Watson Books
  35. Heroic Friendships
  36. Wandering Through Japan
  37. Basho - Haiku Master
  38. Intellectual Apothecary
  39. The Psychedelicon
  40. Great SciFi Books Harriet Klausner has NOT reviewed!
  41. Inspiring sci-fi and fantasy (yes, it does exist!)* under construction
  42. Qumran Cave
  43. Samurai - Origins to Warring States Part I
  44. Sweet ,Romantic DVDS
  45. Explorer Series - Complete*
  46. The Art of Andrey Tarkovsky
  47. my favorite music
  48. Welcome Oscar
  49. A Few Good Catholic Titles
  50. Amazon Shorts: GOLD-DUSTED-GATEWAYS into Star-Studded Minds.
  51. Doctor Who - Second Doctor (Thoughton Seasons 4-6)
  52. A little perfume goes a long way...
  53. Hemmingsonia!
  54. Czech books
  55. Autumn
  56. Doctor Who - First Doctor (Hartnell Seasons 1-4)
  57. Horror Books That Shouldn?t Be Missed
  58. Faith Scrapbooking
  59. Book Video Trailers!!!!!!!
  60. HUMOR IN MANY LANGUAGES
  61. Self, Soul & Consciousness; Physics, Philosophy & Biology of
  62. Books to Read Aloud to a Kid an Adult Can Love, Too
  63. Reading Films is Fun--Spanish Language Films
  64. "Rockin Good Stories, Good Wine, and Great Food"
  65. My Favorite Ambleside Online "Extras" List 1
  66. Doctor Who on DVD -- The New Series
  67. Doctor Who: The Handbooks
  68. Cifford Pickover
  69. Infinite Wealth of Knowledge and Networks
  70. Vernon Joynson
  71. I Feel Better Because of.......poems?
  72. Mystery in History
  73. Book clips, book videos, book trailers
  74. Not Your Typical Board Games
  75. 25 Mucho Fantastic Horror Stories
  76. What I've read in 2007 (to be updated)
  77. Stranded on a Deserted Isle With Just 5 Books
  78. The most underrated Doctor Who stories
  79. Third Set of The New Adventures (Virgin Doctor Who novels)
  80. LOVE HAS STRANGE WAYS
  81. A CLASSICAL SCHOLAR : MICHAEL GRANT (As Author&Translator)
  82. The Old Testament
  83. Rainbow Water
  84. Space-Age Cocktail Music
  85. Be a (Thinking) Conservative
  86. Best Doctor Who on DVD
  87. I really DO love Lucy!
  88. The Thinking Man's Guide to 30 Best Japanese Films on DVD
  89. Ghost Toasties Part II
  90. Historical Romances I've read and loved
  91. Great Music accompanied by Oscar Peterson
  92. Star Trek Movies--Best to Worst
  93. Not too cool for school--movies about school
  94. Kojeve and the End of History; Primary &some Secondary Texts


Thursday, November 22, 2007

Amazon.com's Most Popular Gifts: Books

It's time to address the 900-pound Gorilla in the room: Amazon books. As "Earth's Biggest Bookstore," Amazon.com is synonymous with books in the minds of many consumers, who may not necessarily even think about Amazon for other purchases. The task of adequately indexing Amazon's thousands of book categories through their aStore program is complicated by their 999-category limit for individual stores. There is simply no alternative to splitting our book selections into several more-or-less self-explanatory subdivisions.

Heretofore we have pointed our links to our Browse Amazon Books website, hosted on space provided by a certain ISP who now threatens to discontinue service to anyone who (truthfully) criticizes their woefully inadequate service. That, coupled with Google's headlong rush into corporatism since their acquisition from founders Page and Brinn has pretty well rendered that site irrelevant although MSN Live Search and Yahoo Search still adequately index it.

We have already blogged about our new "Author Mania" store, which features several (mostly fiction) genres that Amazon.com indexes by author. Although building this store has proven to be a rather pains-taking process, other projects are well enough in hand now to continue expanding this resource with some regularity. We've also started Technical Bookmania which attempts to bring Amazon's Technical and Professional categories to light. The specialized books in this store are not individually big sellers, and Amazon doesn't do much to make them easy to find, burying them in an unnecessarily deep and abstruse heirarchy. Finally, we are introducing Book Mania, which is currently an "everything else" catch-all, but should be evolving into our primary book source, where the most popular categories are featured with considerable depth.

In a related story, Amazon just released it's new Kindle e-book reader. Those who have had access to the device in advance for review purposes give it high marks, although the few Amazon customers who have reviewed it thus far are somewhat cooler on the device. It seems little pricey, until you consider that it includes a connection Amazon's own Whispernet wireless telephone network. With all the hoopla that surrounded the Apple iPhone, it's nice to see a truly useful product introduced without quite so much fanfare.

Amazon.com publishes a series of gift guides, which change over time and may even disappear altogether. These snapshots are an excellent indication of what products are popular on any given day. While the content of the guide may vary, these Books should be around for a long time...

  1. Be a Real Estate Millionaire: Secret Strategies for Lifetime Wealth Today
  2. Walking in Your Own Shoes: Discover God's Direction for Your Life
  3. Results That Last: Hardwiring Behaviors That Will Take Your Company to the Top
  4. Deceptively Delicious: Simple Secrets to Get Your Kids Eating Good Food
  5. You: Staying Young: The Owner's Manual for Extending Your Warranty (You)
  6. Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia
  7. I Am America (And So Can You!)
  8. The Dangerous Book for Boys
  9. Rescuing Sprite: A Dog Lover's Story of Joy and Anguish
  10. Stop the 401(k) Rip-off!: Eliminate Costly Hidden Fees to Improve Your Life
  11. The Daring Book for Girls
  12. A Thousand Splendid Suns
  13. Clapton: The Autobiography
  14. Water for Elephants: A Novel
  15. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (Book 7)
  16. The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World
  17. World Without End
  18. Harry Potter Boxset Books 1-7
  19. An Inconvenient Book: Real Solutions to the World's Biggest Problems
  20. Boom!: Voices of the Sixties Personal Reflections on the '60s and Today
  21. The Pillars of the Earth (Deluxe Edition) (Oprah's Book Club)
  22. Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain
  23. Double Cross (Alex Cross)
  24. Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10
  25. Love in the Time of Cholera (Oprah's Book Club)
  26. Three Cups of Tea: One Man's Mission to Promote Peace . . . One School at a Time
  27. Our Dumb World: The Onion's Atlas of the Planet Earth, 73rd Edition
  28. A Lifetime of Secrets: A PostSecret Book
  29. Become a Better You
  30. Quiet Strength: The Principles, Practices, & Priorities of a Winning Life
  31. Star Wars: A Pop-Up Guide to the Galaxy
  32. The War: An Intimate History, 1941-1945
  33. The Nine: Inside the Secret World of the Supreme Court
  34. The Kite Runner
  35. Eclipse (Twilight, Book 3)
  36. Rhett Butler's People
  37. The Secret
  38. The Alphabet from A to Y With Bonus Letter Z!
  39. His Dark Materials Trilogy (The Golden Compass; The Subtle Knife; The Amber Spyglass)
  40. Home to Holly Springs (Father Tim, Book 1)
  41. The Choice
  42. New Moon (Twilight, Book 2)
  43. My Grandfather's Son: A Memoir
  44. Harry Potter Paperback Box Set (Books 1-6)
  45. Playing For Pizza: A Novel
  46. Peek-A-Who?: Board book
  47. The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich
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