Update your bookmarks -- a new location for the Kindle Daily Post online!


If you've been following us at our current location we'd like to let you know that we're moving our blog to a new location on the web at http://www.kindlepost.com (or http://www.kindlepost.com/atom.xml if you use an RSS reader).

The new location will provide the same content as before, but with a friendlier interface and improved graphics. Hope to see you there.

Note: For those who access the Kindle Daily Post from a Kindle device, Kindle Daily Post content will continue to appear in the same location on the Store home page.

Announcing: A New Generation of Kindle


Millions of people are already reading on Kindles and Kindle is the #1 bestselling item on Amazon.com for two years running. It's also the most-wished-for, most-gifted, and has the most 5-star reviews of any product on Amazon.com. Today, Amazon.com is excited to introduce a new generation of Kindle. The all-new Kindle has a new electronic-ink screen with 50 percent better contrast than any other e-reader, a new sleek design with a 21 percent smaller body while still keeping the same 6-inch-size reading area, and a 15 percent lighter weight at just 8.7 ounces. The new Kindle also offers 20 percent faster page turns, up to one month of battery life, double the storage to 3,500 books, built-in Wi-Fi, a graphite color option and more--all for only 189, and still with free 3G wireless--no monthly bills or annual contracts.

Also today, Amazon introduced a new addition to its family of portable reading devices--Kindle Wi-Fi. Readers who don't need the convenience of free 3G wireless can now enjoy the new generation Kindle for the lower price of only 139. The all-new Kindle and Kindle Wi-Fi are now available for pre-order at www.amazon.com/kindle3G and www.amazon.com/kindleWi-Fi, and will ship to customers in over 140 countries and 30 territories beginning August 27.

David Nicholls Talks About 'One Day'


When people ask me where the idea for One Day came from, I usually refuse to tell them. This is not some high-minded, literary pretension on my part, it's simply because I don't want to give too much away. The inspiration for the story is quoted in the novel--you'll find it somewhere near the end.

I hope this doesn't make the book sound too mysterious. It is, after all, a comedy, for the most part at least. There's an old cliché from movie posters; 'you'll laugh, you'll cry' and this was the effect I wanted to have on the reader, to mix laugh-out-loud set-pieces with more dramatic moments, to write an old-fashioned, will they/won't they romantic comedy that gradually turns into something else.

I also wanted to write something on a large scale, an epic love story that took in the last twenty years of changing British culture. Emma Morley and Dexter Mayhew meet properly for the first time on the day of their graduation from Edinburgh University in 1988. After one too many drinks, they end up in bed together, awkward and unsure, and as the sun rises and the drink wears off they speculate on their possible futures. The novel follows the ups and downs of their relationship over the next twenty years, but instead of showing the usual landmarks, the first kiss, the engagements and marriages, the novel shows events on that one perfectly ordinary day, 15th July, at yearly intervals, right up until 2007.

It's always a mistake to make easy connections between a writer's life and work, but I think its fair to say that I couldn't have written this book ten years ago. I turned forty while writing, and also started a family, and both events inevitably lead to a certain amount of retrospection. How do people change between their twenties and their forties? What happened to all those old friends? How does becoming a parent change your attitude to life? The book, if it works, should be like looking through a photo album, watching people get older in a series of tiny, barely noticeable changes, so that at the end you feel as if you really know these characters, have seen them grow up, together and apart.

Publishing a book is always nerve-wracking--all those years of work for something that might be forgotten in six months, if it's ever read at all. But I've been delighted and a little amazed by the response to One Day. Readers seem to have identified with Em and Dex and the journeys they take, and at the time of writing we're working on the movie version, which we hope to make this summer. Whatever happens with the film, I'm told by readers that the book makes them laugh as well as cry, which is what I intended, and the most a writer can hope for.

--David Nicholls

The Christian Science Monitor: Lance Armstrong's team forced to remove 'Livestrong' jerseys


The Christian Science Monitor,  newly launched on Kindle, reported today that Lance Armstrong's Tour de France team delayed the start of the final stage of today's race after being forced to remove their black 'Livestrong' jerseys and revert to the official jerseys they had been wearing.

The Christian Science Monitor discusses the recent attention Armstrong has received regarding this being his last Tour de France and how he's been trying to avoid attention of federal investigators exploring his alleged connections to doping. The reporter, Jon Brand, notes that Armstrong couldn't help attracting the spotlight in his final ride.

Armstrong's RadioShack squad wore special black jerseys with the number "28" on the back at the stage's start in Longjumeau, in honor of the 28 million people world-wide dealing with cancer. Brand notes the Tour organizers hadn't approved the wardrobe change. In the first few miles, they stopped the race and warned RadioShack that if they didn't change back into their original jerseys, they would be disqualified. They obeyed the request, and the race resumed.

Read more about this story and more--start your 14-day free trial today or buy the current issue for 0.75.

The Father of the Thriller Reveals What's Behind the Book


Before there was Clancy, Coonts, or Cussler, there was Higgins.

The author of more than sixty novels, British writer Jack Higgins is considered a father of the modern thriller novel. His novels draw heavily from history and often center around significant events from such conflicts as World War II, the Korean War, and the Cuban Missile Crisis.

One of his most famous works, The Valhalla Exchange,  is based on an event often overlooked by history books--perhaps one of the most bizarre moments in WWII. Here, Higgins explains the gripping true story behind the book:

"The book is based on the little-known fact that during the final week of the Second World War, a small American patrol discovered a group of VIP prisoners under guard in an Austrian castle. One of them was the Earl of Harewood, the present Queen's cousin who had been taken prisoner as an army officer, another was General De Gaulle's sister, and several more were of equal importance. As the American officer was taking the surrender from the German guards an SS column suddenly appeared--their purpose to kidnap and use them as a bargaining tool. The German guards all picked up their weapons and put themselves under the leadership of the American officer. They retreated into the castle, closing the gate of the moat. What took place was probably the strangest battle of the entire war with Germans and Americans fighting together against the SS. The book is based on an entirely true incident and I have embellished and changed the names."

The Valhalla Exchange is among twenty-four Jack Higgins novels for Kindle readers published by Open Road Media. Each ebook comes with bonus material: an illustrated biography complete with never-before-seen photos and details about the author's life. For genre aficionados and first-timers alike, Higgins's thrillers--which have sold more than 250 million copies around the world to date--are not to be missed on your summer reading list.

Odyssey Editions


Today we're excited to announce that The Wylie Agency is publishing 20 books from some of literature's most influential authors through its new Odyssey Editions imprint. This is the first time any of the titles--which include Norman Mailer's The Naked and the Dead,  Philip Roth's Portnoy's Complaint and Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man--have been available electronically, and all of the books are exclusive to the Kindle Store for two years.

"Our goal with Kindle is to make every book, ever published, in print or out of print, available in less than 60 seconds," said Russ Grandinetti, Vice President of Kindle Content. "Having these prominent and important books available through The Wylie Agency's Odyssey Editions is another great step toward this goal. We're excited to let our customers read books like Rabbit Run for the first time ever electronically."

"As the market for e-books grows, it will be important for readers to have access in e-book format to the best contemporary literature the world has to offer," said Andrew Wylie, President of Odyssey Editions. "This publishing program is designed to address that need, and to help e-book readers build a digital library of classic contemporary literature." To see all of the Odyssey Editions, visit: www.amazon.com/odyssey

New to Kindle: The New York Times Book Review


Amazon.com is excited to announce that The New York Times Book Review has now launched on Kindle as a stand-alone subscription. Each week, reviewers select 20-30 notable or important new books, including exceptional new authors. The New York Times Book Review has been one of the most influential and widely read book review publications in the industry since its first publication in 1896.

In the latest issue, Laurie Winer reviews William Powers' Hamlet's BlackBerry: A Practical Philosophy for Building a Good Life in the Digital Age.  After admitting that she sporadically checked her iPhone while reading this book, the reviewer dives deep into this book about our obsessive connectivity and its effect on our brains and very way of life.

Winer first focuses on Powers' theory of evolutionary programming. Powers, a former writer at The Washington Post, suggests this may be responsible for giving us the drive to check our digital screens constantly. Being wired by nature, we pay attention to new stimuli as it helps us to respond quickly to predators or to nab a potential meal. Powers accepts this possibility but expresses worry that the traditional shelter from the crowd, the home, has been invaded to the point where we no longer connect deeply with our families, books, and thoughts. He doesn't see constant connectivity declining and is confident that we will learn to cope with this as previous generations have adapted to the lifestyle changes their technological advancements encouraged.

Winer, the reviewer, applauds Powers for his clear language, restorative historical references, and penetrating ruminations. "As a salve for those who are perhaps prematurely mourning the death of paper, Powers writes of his preference for jotting down ideas in a Moleskine notebook a 'seemingly anachronistic tool' that he feels is essential to his well-being," she concludes.

Learn more about "Hamlet's Blackberry" by starting your 14-day free trial to The New York Times Book Review or buying the current issue for $0.99.

Iris Murdoch's Earliest Works Arrive on Kindle


Remembered to great acclaim in the 2001 film Iris, starring Judy Dench and Kate Winslet, Dame Iris Murdoch remains a respected and relevant literary figure more than a decade after her passing.

Her earliest works have been out of print and inaccessible. Many Amazon readers lamented this in reviews--and you were heard loud and clear! Open Road Media has brought ten of Murdoch's best titles to Kindle this summer. Whether it's a tale of adultery and love's redemption in A Word Child,  a Church scandal in Henry and Cato,  or a debate between intellectual giants Socrates and Plato in Acastos: Two Platonic Dialogues,  Murdoch offers sensitive, razor-sharp portrayals of our innermost thoughts and lives. Challenging, brilliant, and beautifully written, her re-release marks an opportunity to explore one of the most important novelists of the 20th century you haven't yet read.

Think of a Number


As the author of Think of a Number,  now available as a Kindle download at a discounted price until July 26th, I was invited to contribute a few thoughts to the Kindle Blog.

What came to my mind first was an awfully basic question. What is a book? This is not so frivolous a question as it might seem.

A book, after all, is a physical object--a set of ink-on-paper pages bound in an identifying cover. But Think of a Number, like many other novels today, is also available as a set of audio CDs and as a Kindle download.

This variety of delivery systems highlights a simple truth: I didn't just "write a book". Because to put it in that traditional way is to confuse the container with its contents, and to make other delivery systems seem secondary--in some way less authentic.

So, if I am not "writing books", what am I doing?

I believe it is more accurate to say that I am creating stories to be passed on to others. I am engaged in transferring from my mind to yours an imagined landscape, imagined people, imagined actions, and the emotions these engender.

As a story takes shape in my mind, I don't picture it rendered in any particular format beyond language itself. I don't picture my characters struggling in the center of a two-pound hardcover book or on an audio disk or on the screen of a Kindle. I picture only the world of the story. Interestingly, this is true whether I am creating a story myself or taking in a story created by someone else. I have vivid scenes in my mind from stories that have been presented to me one way or another over the years, and I have no idea now whether I read those scenes in a hardcover book or a paperback book or listened to them on tape.

The role of the medium is to deliver the story. So please enjoy Think of a Number in whatever format you personally find most congenial. I know people who like the feel of a traditional book in their hands. And I know more and more people who are delighted with the ease, convenience, and immediacy of a Kindle. As an author, I hope your memories of my story itself will stay with you long after your memories of the format details have faded.

--John Verdon

The Last Block in Harlem


Every so often a book comes along which changes your outlook on the world around you. The Last Block in Harlem by Christopher Herz is one of those books.

Through an unnamed narrator, The Last Block in Harlem explores what it takes to create beauty in a world that seems to create nothing but both physical and intellectual trash. The book opens with a pitch-perfect description of a New York neighborhood where kids run through hydrants and music blares from stereos plugged into lampposts. Feeling dissatisfaction with his career and life choices, the narrator forms a connection with his new block when he begins cleaning up the polluted streets, creating noticeable improvements and restoring the neighborhood's beauty. However, his best intentions go awry when the clean-up brings media coverage that sets off a rash of evictions and ushers in an influx of new and affluent tenants. As guilt sets in among echoes of past decisions that still haunt him, he mobilizes his neighbors to take back the block. The choices he makes now can't change his past, but can change the future for the narrator, his family, and his community.

With themes that explore the effects of gentrification, New York's underground music scene, the deception of politics, a love story, and lyrics that weave their way through the pages like a soundtrack, the book creates a vibrant cacophony that captures the sights, sounds, and smells of city life. This instant transport, set against the thought provoking question of "can we ever really get clean in a polluted world?" makes The Last Block in Harlem a conversation-starter that might just change the way you think about the impact of your choices and actions.

Originally hand-sold throughout the streets of New York City, the author took photos and jotted down short vignettes of everyone who bought a book to post to his blog. As the book's popularity spread, readers began sending in photos of where they went with the book in their hand--from California to Cartagena, Colombia to Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. Now available on Kindle, you can be a part of the story by downloading a copy today.

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