Posts Tagged ‘kindle’

A Hemorrhaging of Souls Free Ebook on April 6 & 7

Thursday, April 5th, 2012

Cover for A Hemorrhaging of Souls

My psychological mystery thriller ebook, A Hemorrhaging of Souls, is free Friday and Saturday, April 6 & 7,  on Amazon.com. “…draws you in compellingly from the opening page…a gripping story of death and family secrets …The characters are quirky and sympathetic.” The Paper Chase

 

Just Released: Self-Publish Your E-Book in Minutes!

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

I’m delighted to announce the electronic publication of my latest how-to primer. This time, I tackled electronic self-publishing with Self-Publish Your E-Book in Minutes!.

I jumped on the digital wagon last year by re-publishing my mysteries as e-books. Soon, I began instructing others—many had failed with traditional publishers or were wary of costly Print on Demand—at a Victoria, B.C., college.

Self-Publish Your E-Book in Minutes by Nicola Furlong

Self-Publish Your E-Book in Minutes

I immediately found the demand far exceeded my eager students and concluded that a practical, simple and affordable how-to primer on electronic publishing was needed.

Thus, Self-Publish Your E-Book in Minutes! was born.

It’s brief, practical and succinctly covers all the essentials of electronic publication, like formatting, uploading and marketing, and is available online at Amazon.com and Smashwords.com for $0.99.

Ebook E-Reader Prices Dropping…Yeah!

Tuesday, June 22nd, 2010

Good news.

Prices for popular e-readers Nook and Kindle are coming down below $200.

Getting better all the time. Full NYT article here.

Gotta buy one soon…

Unnatural States E-Book Now Available on iPhone & Kindle

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

I’ve taken my supernatural thriller, originally published as a multimedia Quillr and reworked it into an e-book called Unnatural States .

It’s now available on the iPhone, Kindle and Smashwords website. See links below.

UnnaturalStates

UnnaturalStates

Only $2.99 US for this fast-paced thriller that mixes bioethics, religion and the supernatural.

Check it out at:

iTunes App Store

Amazon.com Kindle

Smashwords.com

Prepare to be intrigued, challenged and shaken up!

Kobobooks Releases the New EReader

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Heather Reisman, head honcho at Indigo Books & Music and Kobobooks, announced the arrival of yet another contender in the already competitive world of electronic book reading devices.

Look out Kindle, step aside Nook, run for the hills iPad and put ‘em up Sony reader ’cause there’s a new kid in town: the Kobo eReader.

logo for kobobooks

logo for kobobooks

Too bad about the unimaginative name; however, this new device is much cheaper at $150 CA, than its main competitors. This comes at a price as it lacks wireless capabilities.

And who said ebooks were a fad? Welcome little Kobo eReader.

Especially LOVE that you’re a Canuck.

Smashwords Titles Soon Available on Amazon Kindle

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Smashwords, the “people’s ebook publisher and distributor”, have announced another coup: a deal to distribute their titles through Amazon.com’s Kindle Store.

Smashwords logo

Smashwords logo

This is really freakin’ amazing given what is required by an author/publisher to get titles into the Kindle Store. See my earlier post for more info.

I worked for weeks, spending hours lurking on Kindle forums, figuring out Amazon’s Digital Text Platform, uploading dummy test titles, reviewing and testing uploaded versions until finally hitting the publishing button for my three titles.

Amazon Kindle E-Reader

Amazon Kindle E-Reader

And now, all you have to do is be an author in the Smashwords Premium Catalogue (not hard; just follow their sensible text format and conversion advice) and you’ll soon have ebooks available to Kindle readers!

Kindle Finally Available in Canada

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

The Amazon Kindle, the grandaddy of all e-readers, is now available in Canada, though with a few missing bits.

It’ll cost $259 USD plus a $31 USD import fee surcharge. Though it will be able to wirelessly download ebooks, the details about the cellular connectors (Rogers and Telus) in Canada have yet to be revealed.

Amazon Kindle E-Reader

Amazon Kindle E-Reader


The Canuck version will lack a web browser and blog subscription service but the nifty Kindle can hold over 1500 books so it’ll more than do the job as an ebook reader. It just won’t act like a mini computer.

Kindle’s VP said:

“We know that Canadians are passionate about books and reading, and we’re excited to make Kindle available to our customers there,” said Ian Freed, vice-president of Kindle, in a statement. “Kindle enables customers around the world including Canada to think of a book and start reading it in under 60 seconds.”

Read more about this announcement here.

It’s still a pretty pricey gadget but also very tempting.

(And thanks to the Kindle Blog for the pic.)

Use Your PC as a Kindle Ebook Reader

Sunday, November 15th, 2009

I can’t wait to try this: a free download which allows you to use your PC computer as a Kindle!

Here’s Amazon’s annoucement from their Kindle blog:
KindleforPC.

Stay tuned; I’ll blog about my experiences with it soon.

How To Publish an Ebook on Mobipocket.com

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Several months ago, I succeeded in loading four titles (two mysteries, one non-fiction and one short story) onto the Smashwords.com database (here’s how). Step 1 to my ultimate goal of having my ebooks available on Amazon.com.

Mobipocket.com Logo

Mobipocket.com Logo

Step 2 was to use Mobipocket.com (owned by Amazon.com) as my way through the back door into the huge online bookseller. After some internet research, I had learned that you could upload ebooks onto Mobipocket and by extension, eventually into Amazon, and you didn’t need Amazon’s trifecta of account information. You only needed two bits of key information: a bank account in the United States and a United States tax number. You didn’t need a US mailing address.

So I went for it. After some searching, I discovered that one Canadian major bank has a US version, based in Florida. A few phone calls, two meetings at my local branch and three weeks of impatient waiting later, one key bit was accomplished.

I must admit I was intimidated about applying for a US tax number. That meant calling the Internal Revenue Service. Yikes! But I pushed through, figuring I would only run into trouble if I made money. And if I made money, it’d be worth it.

Amazon requires one of two types of tax numbers: a Tax ID number or an Employer ID number. The former is really hard to get; the latter a relative breeze, which I learned with the assistance of a kind and helpful IRS employee.

(more…)

Great Review on Amazon.com for Youdunit Whodunit!

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Just discovered a terrific new review on Amazon.com for Youdunit Whodunit!, my little how-to write a mystery primer.

Lou Allin, a fellow Canadian crime writer said the following:

The Little How-To Book That Could:

Of the dozen “how to” books on mystery writing I’ve read, most wasted too many trees, and on Vancouver Island, that’s important. One big-name author provided only a single worthwhile nugget of advice in four hundred pages: don’t write about boring people. But Canadians are very innovative, especially about saving time. Didn’t we invent Velcro? Pablum? The Bloody Caesar?

Cover for mystery writing primer, Youdunit Whodunit!

Cover for mystery writing primer, Youdunit Whodunit!

Recently my colleague Nicola Furlong produced a short, compact, and helpful e-book called Youdunit Whodunit. This crash course in mystery writing is as jam packed with gems as Nicola’s signature chocolate-pecan turtles.

For those starting out, or for authors who want to keep their writing on track, YW has twenty-two chapters in three basic innings: Structure, Character, and Story. With a wealth of pithy examples taken from selective authors, she cuts to the chase.

Hit the reader early and hit him hard. Why is the protagonist involved, if it’s not a police procedural? What do you do in mid-story, where a book often bogs? What are the pitfalls of various POV’s? Where do you get your ideas? How should you handle flashbacks and make smooth transitions without the speed bumps which mar even the best books?

Nicola will have you off and running in minutes. She’s an editor, agent, and coach all in one.

It comes as no surprise that the book is introduced and endorsed by two of our northern mystery lionesses, Maureen Jennings and Mary Jane Maffini. With multiple series and decades of best-seller success, when they speak, wise authors listen.

Obviously, I’m thrilled with Lou’s positive reaction to my ebook BUT what I find really neat is her review writing style.

Notice how adroitly she draws you in to the concept of a short ebook (crash course on writing mysteries) by referring both to the environment (wasted trees) and to her perspective (a Vancouver Islander) and then she adds a fun tidbit of Canadian trivia (Velcro, Pablum and the Bloody Ceasar!).

Not only is it an excellent lead in to her review, it doubles as an lovely introduction to Lou Allin, mystery author.

So, once you’ve bought and mastered Youdunit Whodunit!, why not check out Lou’s terrific Belle Palmer Mystery Series and see how a pro does it?