Showing posts with label Kindle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kindle. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Tragic Darlings — Poetry By Terri Deno


Just a reminder: It’s okay to leave comments!

Terri Deno has a new book of poetry available on Amazon called Tragic Darlings!!

Terri's collection is "an exploration of identity and self--how the characters we play reflect onto the world, leaving many with our truest selves still hidden."

It's available in both paperback and as a Kindle version.


                                           


Here's a tiny sample of what's inside:


I hope that sparks an interest!

Again, available on Amazon in both paperback and Kindle versions!

While your at it, click this link to take a look at all of Terri's offerings!



© 2024 K. R. Smith All rights reserved





Monday, February 14, 2022

Dark Fantasy On Sale! Dead Lake



Okay, the sale is over, but you can still check out Dead Lake with the links below!


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If you're looking for a little dark fantasy to read, do I have a deal for you!


Miranda Kate, author of many horror and science fiction stories, is offering her latest book, Dead Lake, for only $.99 for the next week! It already has 3 five-star reviews!

Dead Lake is a dark paranormal fantasy novel set a few hundred years from now in a post-apocalyptic world. After a massive shift of the tectonic plates decimated the world and its population, life on the remaining landmass has returned to simple living, with money, rulers and religion no longer tolerated. If you've followed Miranda's blog you may already be familiar with the protagonist of this novel, Tricky. 

For a little bit more of what to expect, here's Tricky's situation:

Sometimes it pays to be tricky
 
Damn and blast! That rancid piece of excrement, Carter, has had her ransacked out of Clancy!

Tricky returns to her cottage to find it turned upside down. An action that means she’s got three days to leave the district or face punishment. Randolf Carter, head of the district, is spreading lies and suspicion about her kind, making life difficult. But it wasn’t just an ordinary ransacking – they were searching for something.

Using her gifts, Tricky traces the energy left by the men and spies another creature’s energy among it: a jackdaw. Swift and wily, it’s pinched her precious gemstone, a piece of black obsidian. But at whose bidding? Communicating with birds is a rare ability and she knows all who possess it.

Tricky wants her stone back, but coming up against people like Carter won’t be easy, especially when he’s got one of her kind in his employ. But she’ll handle it, oh yes she will. She'll just have to be careful and a little bit tricky. Good thing she is then, isn’t it?

Adept at working with energy and time as well as communicating with trees, Tricky is lured into something bigger than ownership of a gemstone, and finds out that sometimes it pays to be a little bit tricky.


The book will only be on sale for a week, so don't delay! 


Miranda Kate

Here are a few of her books available on Amazon!




© 2022 K. R. Smith All rights reserved

Monday, May 21, 2018

The Amazing Shrinking Kindle Universe


Just a reminder: It’s okay to leave comments!


Write On

Kindle Scout

Amazon's platforms for authors keep shrinking

And if you haven't heard, Amazon is shutting down Kindle Worlds. In Amazon's words:

"Kindle Worlds is a publication platform where you choose a licensed World, read the Content Guidelines for that World, write your story, upload that story, create a cover, and click through a publishing agreement with Amazon Publishing. Once published, every Kindle Worlds story will be featured on Amazon.com, as well as on Kindle devices and apps. Follow the steps below to publish your story today!"

Except that submissions are now closed.


This is a real problem for authors who have written for Kindle Worlds. It's up to each world owner to determine how, or if, authors can keep selling their work. A few owners I've looked at have mentioned nothing.

Let me know if you've written for Kindle Worlds and if you've heard what your options are. You can read the thoughts on this subject by Kindle Worlds author Terri Deno here: The Death of Kindle Worlds.

What alternatives are you looking into for writing fan fiction? Let me know!


© 2017 K. R. Smith All rights reserved

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Phony Kindle



eBooks are great for those on the go. They allow you to carry a good-sized library right in your pocket. Amazon's Kindle is one of the leaders in this area, and they make it easy by providing software to turn your PC, tablet, or other device into a Kindle reader.

One of those other devices happens to be my Android phone. A rather old Android phone.

I had installed the Kindle software on it some time ago, and to be quite frank, it left a lot to be desired. It was slow and prone to crashing, but it worked well enough to allow me to read a number of books while on my way to work without having to carry an additional electronic device. After a while, however, things got worse. It began to get slower even after upgrading, took forever to launch, and crashed so much that I finally uninstalled it.

Noticing that I had an alert on the Kindle software on my PC that told me I needed to upgrade, I thought I might try to re-install it on the old phone. And so my troubles began...

I downloaded the new version and, after giving it permission to access most of my life's secrets that are stored somewhere on that ancient phone, told it to install itself, which it did. Sort of.

Since I had de-registered the phone, it wanted me to re-register the device. So I put in my e-mail address and then attempted to put in my password. At this point, it locked up and eventually rebooted, all without any external input.

I repeated this process several times before I decided to check the amount of remaining memory. I believe this is the first time I've ever seen a negative number on that screen.

So I moved the application to the SD memory card, and the results were the same, only it took less time to crash.

At that point, I did an uninstall of the Kindle software. Then I downloaded and installed it again.

This time, it let me put in my password before locking up the phone and crashing.

Once more (with gusto), I did the uninstall and re-install. This time, however, I moved the application to the memory card before starting the program. I attempted to register the device, and this time the process worked, albeit slowly. Then when the program finished setting itself up, it told me my library was in the archives, and so it was.

Just to be certain this was no aberration, I shut the program down and re-started it. It came up almost immediately. I brought one of the books back from the archive to my pseudo-Kindle, and it opened almost as fast as my regular Kindle. I tried this multiple times, and the process was repeatable and successful.

I now have a truly functional and useful eBook reader. I may never upgrade again. Or be able to buy another phone.

My advice is to copy that program to your memory card right after installing it and before attempting to read a single word of any eBook. I'm hoping that's the secret should I need to do this again.

.


Image source https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-tUnSh4hL1b0/AAAAAAAAAAI/AAAAAAAAfkM/sBKy2FMBy1s/s120-c/photo.jpg


 



Shameless
plug
section!
 
The horror anthology,
includes my poem, The Ballad of Drunken Jack.
Available on Amazon for Kindle 
(yes, even the Kindle on your Android phone)
or in paperback.

© 2012-2014 K. R. Smith All rights reserved