@sammydog01 Mark Bittman was one of my favorite food columnists until he left the NYT. I love this book; my copy is festooned with dozens, perhaps hundreds, of sticky-notes marking all my favorites. He did a column a few years ago of 100 easy salads and dressings; many were 3-4 ingredients paired in ways I’d never thought of but enjoyed mightily when we table-tested them.
Couple here I recommend: Second Hand Souls by Christopher Moore Jaws by Peter Benchley White Fang by Jack London The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson John Dies at the End by David Wong Noir by Christopher Moore Murder in an Irish Village (a cozy type mystery) by Carlene O’Connor
From Amazon: On any Echo device, say “Alexa, start my Audible trial” to start. Alexa will let you know you’ll get two free audiobooks, and as a birthday surprise, we’ll add two more to your account after you sign up.
I got an Audible book to listen to as I drive. Unfortunately, my Toyota has a proprietary radio/audio system. The problem is compounded because I use a flip phone. My only hope is to transfer the book to a flash drive. This would be for my own use only. Any help?
@spiralroad Unable to do this with Audible books. There are sources to purchase audiobooks in MP3 format, or on CD, which can then be ripped to MP3.
Maybe consider a super inexpensive current Android phone and use it as a dedicated Audible player for the car? You don’t have to activate mobile service, just use wifi to load up your Audible app and download your books. A cheap Android phone can be had at Walmart, et al for as little as $15. Probably under $10 on Black Friday.
I started listening in the car a few years ago. Now, over 100 books later, I cannot imagine driving for more than a few minutes without one.
Do you have a CD burner at home, or can you access a CD burner somewhere?
Audible permits any audiobook to be burned to CD. There are instructions on how to do this on the audible site.
You can then play the book as is on your CD player.
Or, once the audiobook is on a CD, you can rip it to mp3. (iTunes does a decent job of this).
Or you can get a dedicated device (say, an old, unactivated Android or ios phone). Don’t activate the phone.
Use wifi to put the audible app on the phone and to download the audible book to the app.
Either patch the player into your car audio system issuing a patch cord or a device that xmits your device audio to a radio signal.
Or play in the car using earbuds or with an external speaker.
(If I use earbuds in the car, I only use one earbud on ear, the other one out of ear… So that I can hear what’s going on with the other ear… For safety reasons)
@ruouttaurmind@spiralroad I have a crappy Fire tablet I use for audiobooks- it works fine with a portable speaker. I used to have one of those radio transmitters that @f00l mentioned- they’re nice in small cities and rural areas but big cities tend to have cluttered airwaves and it’s hard to find one that works. Plus if you travel you have to keep changing the frequency. It worked nicely around town.
but big cities tend to have cluttered airwaves and it’s hard to find one that works
It is hit or miss to be sure. I use one and commute throughout the Phoenix metroplex regularly without any issues. Though I admit, this is my third device. The first was a dirt cheap lightning deal and was total crap, the second worked well, but broke in a few months. This one has been serving me well for about two years now.
Update: I’ve been experimenting with the Audible recommended process for downloading Audible content and burning to CD (or virtual CD) for eventual conversion to MP3.
The instructions on the Audible website which I linked above are woefully out of date and inaccurate. At least when working from a Windows 10 desktop. I’m still working through the process, so I do not yet know if it is still possible to accomplish my initial goal. Will post updates as progress is made, or roadblocks are encountered.
Ok, so here’s this on that. The instructions on the Audible Help site are not even close to accurate for current Windows OS. Fine for Win98/2K, forget it for anything else.
I’m still digesting all the steps I took, and evaluating which were required and actually provided results. But the overall stab is this:
You need to have the Audible desktop application installed. You may, or may not need the AudibleManager app installed. You may or may not need the Audible Download Manager app installed. You need iTunes installed, and you need to authorize iTunes to access your Audible library. I’m not yet totally sure how I initiated that process.
So as of this moment, I have the ability to download Audible titles from my Audible cloud library by using the Audible Windows app. When the titles are downloaded, they are automatically recognized by iTunes in the local iTunes audiobook library. Now I’m going to proceed attempting to create an audio CD (virtual or real) and convert to MP3.
Final Update: It is not possible to convert a Audible book to MP3 format using Audible’s documented method from a Windows 10 computer.
Audible’s documented method in summary:
Download the book to your PC.
Import the book into iTunes.
Use iTunes to burn the book to a disk in MP3-CD format.
In reality there are more steps and tools required to actually reach the final step than that documented by Audible.
However, it’s all moot because the final step says to burn a MP3-CD which Audible’s DRM does not permit.
You CAN burn a audio CD, then RIP the CD to MP3 format I guess. Again, that requires additional steps and tools.
Either you must use several physical CD’s, or you must have a third-party tool which facilitates the creation of ISO disk images directly from iTunes. You can then RIP the ISO images using Windows Media Player into MP3 format.
At the end of the day… not worth my time and trouble. I was hoping to rip to MP3, then load the book to a microSD card and insert the microSD card into my FM modulator in the car. This would permit me to play my books without having to go phone via BT->FM modulator->car stereo. Eliminating the Bluetooth involvement would certainly increase fidelity and reduce signal noise.
But I’m too lazy to go through this process for every book I want to listen to. So it’s the status quo for me.
@spiralroad Audible used to be compatible with some third party MP3 players, like those from Sansa, but I can’t find evidence that it still is. I found a help article that says “Windows XP or higher”, which doesn’t give me hope it’s up to day.
I used to use a cheap Sansa device twelve or thirteen years ago, but I just use my phone now.
@craigthom The Audible app for Windows supports a handful of MP3 players. You can download books from your library using the Windows app, then transfer them to your supported MP3 device. However the MP3 is DRM protected and cannot be copied from the device to any other location. It can only be deleted.
@sammydog01 There was one good thing to come of it all. My Audible subscription expired Monday and I cancelled rather than renewing. When I contacted Audible tech support for the final word on MP3 conversion, after they told me “won’t work”, they offered me a half price Gold subscription for three months. So there’s that bit of good to come of my experiments today.
@f00l I might go through the motions for some of my longer books. More effort up front, but worth it for the convenience and quality of listening experience with a 20 hour book. Not really worth the 45 minutes of effort for a 4 hour title.
@ruouttaurmind@sammydog01 and others who made suggestions and even tried to work out a method for me to use, THANKS for your help and efforts. It seems that using an old or puny cell phone on wifi might be the simplest option, even though it would require keeping it charged.
@f00l mentioned Jerome K Jerome in the thread about Moose’s dog. A ton of his stuff is free on kindle. I even splurged on the audiobook of Told After Supper which is scary stories told on Christmas eve. I need something to make it through the upcoming season.
He did another “humorous vacation touring” book called Three Men On A Bummel.
So very funny, but not as funny as the Three Men On A Boat book; in part because the “bummel” was a meandering bike trip around Germany.
And all the cultural qualities that lead Germany into their WWI and WWII situations (excessive and thoughtless addiction to absolute and rigid orderlyness) are all too obvious even at the end of the 1900’s.
@f00l@therealjrn I’m saving it for after Thanksgiving because that’s when the season starts. Hear that, Einstein’s? You made me listen to Jingle Bells yesterday and I’m pissed off. I just wanted bagels.
@f00l@sammydog01@therealjrn by chance yesterday a friend mentioned Three Men on a Boat and it rang the faintest of bells. She couldn’t be stopped, such is her love of TMoaB, and so she read a big chunk of Chapter 4, the Packing bit. I was instantly won over! So easy to see the connection to Wodehouse, Douglas Adams and Terry Pratchett.
Her husband actually tracked down for her a first edition of the thing, from 1889, the year of Seattle’s Fire. As Crudbump sang so sweetly, “…in a thousand years we never existed.” And as Dan Quayle sagely intoned, “…how true that is!”
I think a “Bummel” is a sort of wandering trip with no fixed itinerary.
They were bicycling around Germany, circa 1900 I think.
The diff is that all the cultural traits that led to the horrors on WWI and WWII are easy to spot (or to exaggerate within the reader’s imagination [ie unreasoning love of order and authority]), since we all now read with knowledge of the history of the twentieth Century.
@f00l I have the A&E version of Shackelton on DVD and it’s really good. I watched it on a 100 degree summer day and was shivering. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0272839/
Audible has stuff on sale for non-members. I found this out on Reddit. Things I bought: Good Omens, The Necromonicon, For We Are Many (Bobiverse), and Black House. I’m not sure what the deal is but they don’t usually let me buy stuff on sale. I’ll let you know if Reddit pops up any other good stuff.
This may be of limited interest, but I was talking with a coworker about Mary Poppins yesterday and it occurred to me that there may be a kindle deal because of the new movie. And there is! $2.99 to own, free to read for prime members: an omnibus of Mary Poppins, Mary Poppins Comes Back, Mary Poppins Opens the Door and Mary Poppins in the Park.
I bought the Kindle version of The Talisman by Peter Straub and Stephen King. Except it wasn’t. The Chinese type in the info section should have been a clue. I returned it for a refund but can’t find a way to report it. Anyone know how?
@f00l I decided it was too much work. Maybe if everyone returns it they’ll get the message. They have “other” as a choice for returning but no box for fraud.
Amazon and Google Play have the eBook edition of On a Pale Horse by Piers Anthony for $0.99. This is great, mid-1980s series from Xanth author Piers Anthony and lots of fun. Oh the memories…
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing (The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up)
by Marie Kondō (Author)
$2.99 for the e-book at BN and Amazon. Possibly other e-book stores are price matching. Today, thru midnight (whatever a given e-book store uses as midnight.)
This book is worth it if you have too much stuff it too much disorder.
Christianaudio.com is offering the three LOTR audio books for $15.00 for their Cyber Monday sale. You have to sign up for the 30 day free trial to be able to purchase.
Scroll down the page to see the deal. When you click on the deal it automatically adds it to your cart.
These audiobooks can be downloaded to any audio device or their app can be used for playback.
How to Cook Everything with 2000 recipes. I prefer hard back cookbooks but for $3 it’s worth a try. The reviews are really good.
https://www.amazon.com/How-Cook-Everything-Recipes-Anniversary/dp/0764578650/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1541430090&sr=8-1&keywords=how+to+cook+everything+by+mark+bittman
@sammydog01 Mark Bittman was one of my favorite food columnists until he left the NYT. I love this book; my copy is festooned with dozens, perhaps hundreds, of sticky-notes marking all my favorites. He did a column a few years ago of 100 easy salads and dressings; many were 3-4 ingredients paired in ways I’d never thought of but enjoyed mightily when we table-tested them.
Audible Members: 2-fer sale.
Couple here I recommend:
Second Hand Souls by Christopher Moore
Jaws by Peter Benchley
White Fang by Jack London
The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson
John Dies at the End by David Wong
Noir by Christopher Moore
Murder in an Irish Village (a cozy type mystery) by Carlene O’Connor
Not an Audible member? Through 11/6 Amazon is celebrating Alexa’s 4th birthday with a “4 free audiobooks” offer.
From Amazon: On any Echo device, say “Alexa, start my Audible trial” to start. Alexa will let you know you’ll get two free audiobooks, and as a birthday surprise, we’ll add two more to your account after you sign up.
Thx for topic!
I got an Audible book to listen to as I drive. Unfortunately, my Toyota has a proprietary radio/audio system. The problem is compounded because I use a flip phone. My only hope is to transfer the book to a flash drive. This would be for my own use only. Any help?
@spiralroad Unable to do this with Audible books. There are sources to purchase audiobooks in MP3 format, or on CD, which can then be ripped to MP3.
Maybe consider a super inexpensive current Android phone and use it as a dedicated Audible player for the car? You don’t have to activate mobile service, just use wifi to load up your Audible app and download your books. A cheap Android phone can be had at Walmart, et al for as little as $15. Probably under $10 on Black Friday.
I started listening in the car a few years ago. Now, over 100 books later, I cannot imagine driving for more than a few minutes without one.
@spiralroad
Do you have a CD player in car?
Do you have a CD burner at home, or can you access a CD burner somewhere?
Audible permits any audiobook to be burned to CD. There are instructions on how to do this on the audible site.
You can then play the book as is on your CD player.
Or, once the audiobook is on a CD, you can rip it to mp3. (iTunes does a decent job of this).
Or you can get a dedicated device (say, an old, unactivated Android or ios phone). Don’t activate the phone.
Use wifi to put the audible app on the phone and to download the audible book to the app.
Either patch the player into your car audio system issuing a patch cord or a device that xmits your device audio to a radio signal.
Or play in the car using earbuds or with an external speaker.
(If I use earbuds in the car, I only use one earbud on ear, the other one out of ear… So that I can hear what’s going on with the other ear… For safety reasons)
@ruouttaurmind @spiralroad I have a crappy Fire tablet I use for audiobooks- it works fine with a portable speaker. I used to have one of those radio transmitters that @f00l mentioned- they’re nice in small cities and rural areas but big cities tend to have cluttered airwaves and it’s hard to find one that works. Plus if you travel you have to keep changing the frequency. It worked nicely around town.
@f00l @sammydog01 @spiralroad
It is hit or miss to be sure. I use one and commute throughout the Phoenix metroplex regularly without any issues. Though I admit, this is my third device. The first was a dirt cheap lightning deal and was total crap, the second worked well, but broke in a few months. This one has been serving me well for about two years now.
@f00l @spiralroad I stand corrected. Yes, apparently you can via iTunes. Here’s the Audible.com linky with detailed instructions.
Update: I’ve been experimenting with the Audible recommended process for downloading Audible content and burning to CD (or virtual CD) for eventual conversion to MP3.
The instructions on the Audible website which I linked above are woefully out of date and inaccurate. At least when working from a Windows 10 desktop. I’m still working through the process, so I do not yet know if it is still possible to accomplish my initial goal. Will post updates as progress is made, or roadblocks are encountered.
Ok, so here’s this on that. The instructions on the Audible Help site are not even close to accurate for current Windows OS. Fine for Win98/2K, forget it for anything else.
I’m still digesting all the steps I took, and evaluating which were required and actually provided results. But the overall stab is this:
You need to have the Audible desktop application installed. You may, or may not need the AudibleManager app installed. You may or may not need the Audible Download Manager app installed. You need iTunes installed, and you need to authorize iTunes to access your Audible library. I’m not yet totally sure how I initiated that process.
So as of this moment, I have the ability to download Audible titles from my Audible cloud library by using the Audible Windows app. When the titles are downloaded, they are automatically recognized by iTunes in the local iTunes audiobook library. Now I’m going to proceed attempting to create an audio CD (virtual or real) and convert to MP3.
Final Update: It is not possible to convert a Audible book to MP3 format using Audible’s documented method from a Windows 10 computer.
Audible’s documented method in summary:
Download the book to your PC.
Import the book into iTunes.
Use iTunes to burn the book to a disk in MP3-CD format.
In reality there are more steps and tools required to actually reach the final step than that documented by Audible.
However, it’s all moot because the final step says to burn a MP3-CD which Audible’s DRM does not permit.
You CAN burn a audio CD, then RIP the CD to MP3 format I guess. Again, that requires additional steps and tools.
Either you must use several physical CD’s, or you must have a third-party tool which facilitates the creation of ISO disk images directly from iTunes. You can then RIP the ISO images using Windows Media Player into MP3 format.
At the end of the day… not worth my time and trouble. I was hoping to rip to MP3, then load the book to a microSD card and insert the microSD card into my FM modulator in the car. This would permit me to play my books without having to go phone via BT->FM modulator->car stereo. Eliminating the Bluetooth involvement would certainly increase fidelity and reduce signal noise.
But I’m too lazy to go through this process for every book I want to listen to. So it’s the status quo for me.
@ruouttaurmind Wow, you tried hard. The other advantage to having a dedicated cheap device is that you can use the overdrive app for library books.
@spiralroad Audible used to be compatible with some third party MP3 players, like those from Sansa, but I can’t find evidence that it still is. I found a help article that says “Windows XP or higher”, which doesn’t give me hope it’s up to day.
I used to use a cheap Sansa device twelve or thirteen years ago, but I just use my phone now.
@craigthom The Audible app for Windows supports a handful of MP3 players. You can download books from your library using the Windows app, then transfer them to your supported MP3 device. However the MP3 is DRM protected and cannot be copied from the device to any other location. It can only be deleted.
@sammydog01 There was one good thing to come of it all. My Audible subscription expired Monday and I cancelled rather than renewing. When I contacted Audible tech support for the final word on MP3 conversion, after they told me “won’t work”, they offered me a half price Gold subscription for three months. So there’s that bit of good to come of my experiments today.
@ruouttaurmind @sammydog01
You might get better results in burning and ripping using the older .aa file format. Not sure.
It’s all a pain but can be done.
@f00l I might go through the motions for some of my longer books. More effort up front, but worth it for the convenience and quality of listening experience with a 20 hour book. Not really worth the 45 minutes of effort for a 4 hour title.
@ruouttaurmind @sammydog01 and others who made suggestions and even tried to work out a method for me to use, THANKS for your help and efforts. It seems that using an old or puny cell phone on wifi might be the simplest option, even though it would require keeping it charged.
@f00l mentioned Jerome K Jerome in the thread about Moose’s dog. A ton of his stuff is free on kindle. I even splurged on the audiobook of Told After Supper which is scary stories told on Christmas eve. I need something to make it through the upcoming season.
@sammydog01
He’s funny as hell.
He did another “humorous vacation touring” book called Three Men On A Bummel.
So very funny, but not as funny as the Three Men On A Boat book; in part because the “bummel” was a meandering bike trip around Germany.
And all the cultural qualities that lead Germany into their WWI and WWII situations (excessive and thoughtless addiction to absolute and rigid orderlyness) are all too obvious even at the end of the 1900’s.
@f00l @sammydog01
@f00l @therealjrn I’m saving it for after Thanksgiving because that’s when the season starts. Hear that, Einstein’s? You made me listen to Jingle Bells yesterday and I’m pissed off. I just wanted bagels.
@f00l @sammydog01 They think they’re soooo smart down there!
@f00l @sammydog01 @therealjrn by chance yesterday a friend mentioned Three Men on a Boat and it rang the faintest of bells. She couldn’t be stopped, such is her love of TMoaB, and so she read a big chunk of Chapter 4, the Packing bit. I was instantly won over! So easy to see the connection to Wodehouse, Douglas Adams and Terry Pratchett.
Her husband actually tracked down for her a first edition of the thing, from 1889, the year of Seattle’s Fire. As Crudbump sang so sweetly, “…in a thousand years we never existed.” And as Dan Quayle sagely intoned, “…how true that is!”
@sammydog01 @therealjrn @UncleVinny
They also did another one.
Three Men on a Bummel.
Which is also funny.
I think a “Bummel” is a sort of wandering trip with no fixed itinerary.
They were bicycling around Germany, circa 1900 I think.
The diff is that all the cultural traits that led to the horrors on WWI and WWII are easy to spot (or to exaggerate within the reader’s imagination [ie unreasoning love of order and authority]), since we all now read with knowledge of the history of the twentieth Century.
@sammydog01 @therealjrn @UncleVinny
Oops. Repeated self.
@f00l @sammydog01 @therealjrn I wuznt gonna say nuthin
@sammydog01 @therealjrn @UncleVinny
Amazon Kindle and Google Play have
Endurance: Shackleton’s Incredible Voyage
for $2.99
If you have another fav e-book store, might be worth checking for a similar price.
Amazon link
https://www.amazon.com/Endurance-Shackletons-Incredible-Alfred-Lansing-ebook/dp/B00IC8VF10/?creative=9325&camp=1789&linkCode=ur2&ie=UTF8&tag=slickdeals&ascsubtag=ae49cd50e5c911e8814b5281c35caba30INT&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=merchandised-search-3&pf_rd_r=EC5GJYB9ZSHW3CPBAZSD&pf_rd_r=EC5GJYB9ZSHW3CPBAZSD&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=afb3b00f-2bdf-4a2e-9d0c-5951fb192add&pf_rd_p=afb3b00f-2bdf-4a2e-9d0c-5951fb192add&pf_rd_i=7533915011
Amazon Kindle store has many interesting history, bio, memoir, biz, and other non-fiction on the Kindle Daily Deal page. Good stuff. Take a look.
https://www.amazon.com/s/ref=s9_acsd_hps_bw_clnk_r?node=7533915011&pf_rd_m=ATVPDKIKX0DER&pf_rd_s=merchandised-search-2&pf_rd_r=AR3CXT8HTW8GGBBFVQ4E&pf_rd_t=101&pf_rd_p=a4e5f6e3-64eb-4ce8-b692-f41f07bc5e86&pf_rd_i=11552285011
@f00l I have the A&E version of Shackelton on DVD and it’s really good. I watched it on a 100 degree summer day and was shivering.
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0272839/
Bunches of free audiobooks. From Google play and other etailers.
Includes Twas The Night Before Christmas
Dora’s Super Sleepover, Twas the night before Christmas and more FREE audiobooks @ Google Play + FREE audiobooks from various sites
https://slickdeals.net/f/12257197-dora-s-super-sleepover-twas-the-night-before-christmas-and-more-free-audiobooks-google-play-free-audiobooks-from-various-sites?src=SiteSearchV2Algo1
Audible has stuff on sale for non-members. I found this out on Reddit. Things I bought: Good Omens, The Necromonicon, For We Are Many (Bobiverse), and Black House. I’m not sure what the deal is but they don’t usually let me buy stuff on sale. I’ll let you know if Reddit pops up any other good stuff.
@sammydog01 And The Restaurant at the End of the Universe too.
@sammydog01
Link to the Reddit thread? Or did you find a sale page on Audible?
Much thx.
@f00l https://www.audible.com/ep/TYS2018
This may be of limited interest, but I was talking with a coworker about Mary Poppins yesterday and it occurred to me that there may be a kindle deal because of the new movie. And there is! $2.99 to own, free to read for prime members: an omnibus of Mary Poppins, Mary Poppins Comes Back, Mary Poppins Opens the Door and Mary Poppins in the Park.
https://www.amazon.com/Mary-Poppins-Comes-Back-Opens-ebook/dp/B00O70WODK/ref=sr_1_1_sspa?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1542491180&sr=1-1-spons&keywords=mary+poppins&psc=1
I bought the Kindle version of The Talisman by Peter Straub and Stephen King. Except it wasn’t. The Chinese type in the info section should have been a clue. I returned it for a refund but can’t find a way to report it. Anyone know how?
@sammydog01
Amazon has a Kindle section of CS. Try a call?
@f00l I decided it was too much work. Maybe if everyone returns it they’ll get the message. They have “other” as a choice for returning but no box for fraud.
Amazon and Google Play have the eBook edition of On a Pale Horse by Piers Anthony for $0.99. This is great, mid-1980s series from Xanth author Piers Anthony and lots of fun. Oh the memories…
https://slickdeals.net/share/iphone_app/t/12290563
Sunday’s Audible Daily Deal, for those who can purchase it:
https://www.audible.com/pd/The-Lathe-of-Heaven-Audiobook/B01M1N5CQ2?ref=a_hp_c10_dd&pf_rd_p=e1ee9bbd-e722-4e95-a869-d0a5cec09f12&pf_rd_r=W3DGWMFJ0XBBF5Z25989
The Lathe of Heaven
By: Ursula K. Le Guin
Narrated by: George
$2.95 thru midnight Pacific Time
Audible.com has a few quite decent “start a membership” deals going.
Perhaps the “join using Alexa” deal is still up, I dunno.
To find these, go to Slickdeals.net and search for “audible”.
With all these, cancel anytime, just spend all your credits first. The books you purchased with $ or credits are yours forever.
(People who have memberships can fully participate in the Daily Deal and all the sales.)
https://www.amazon.com/H-G-Wells-Science-Fiction-Collection/dp/B008BU377E/ref=sr_1_4?tag=slickdeals&ascsubtag=c810e95ef11711e889a3562d90c888120INT&ie=UTF8&qid=1543189967&sr=1-4&keywords=h g wells
4 HG Wells audiobooks for $2.95 total
The Invisible Man, The Time Machine, The War of The Worlds, and The Island of Doctor Moreau.
The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up: The Japanese Art of Decluttering and Organizing (The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up)
by Marie Kondō (Author)
$2.99 for the e-book at BN and Amazon. Possibly other e-book stores are price matching. Today, thru midnight (whatever a given e-book store uses as midnight.)
This book is worth it if you have too much stuff it too much disorder.
https://m.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-life-changing-magic-of-tidying-up-marie-kondo/1119564096?ean=9781607747314
https://www.amazon.com/Life-Changing-Magic-Tidying-Decluttering-Organizing-ebook/dp/B00KK0PICK/ref=sr_1_2?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1543201165&sr=1-2&keywords=Tidying+up
https://www.amazon.com/Have-No-Mouth-Must-Scream-ebook/dp/B00JVCHEMU/ref=sr_1_30?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1543201506&sr=1-30
I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream: Stories
Kindle Edition
by Harlan Ellison (Author)
$1.99 today at Amazon
@f00l Oooh, sorry I missed that one.
All three LOTR audiobooks unabridged for $15.00
https://slickdeals.net/?sdtrk=iphone&apikey=b125c57c240217c7f7b27d7f3167064b126475d6&api_key_id=16085672&sdpid=122434927&sdtid=12357244&sdfid=9&lno=1&trd=https christianaudio wbr com cyb&pv=&au=&u2=https%3A%2F%2Fchristianaudio.com%2Fcyber-monday-2018
(From Slickdeals.net)
@f00l Ibought Those last year. I need to listen to them sometime.