The False(B)logic Second Annual Book Giveaway, Round Three

All these, and more, could be yours!
Congratulations to PointZeroEight and Adam for winning in the second round of the book giveaway! Books are on the way to you now! This week we’ll have three winners who’ll receive random books in their mailboxes! To enter comment on any blog post this week!

The False(B)logic Second Annual Book Giveaway Continues!

Books! Books for You!

Congratulations to our first winner: Kayma! As soon as I hear from back from our winner I’ll be sending them a copy of Glen Cook’s Shadowline! This week there will be two winners! How do you enter? Easy, just comment on any post on the blog made between now and next Saturday. False(B)logic updates on Sunday, Monday, Wednesday an even easier way to follow though is to just subscribe to the blog. False(B)logic’s RSS feed is here. There’s also a subscription option on the sidebar to your right!

For all the details check last weeks post.

False(B)logic Second Annual Book Giveaway!

All these, and more, could be yours!
It’s roughly that time of year again folks! The sun doesn’t set until after 8 PM, the mercury rises about 100 everyday, and I give away books to people who leave comments on my blog! This year we’ve got quite the selection!

A sample:

  • Neuromancer by William Gibson
  • Revelations by Sandy Cohen
  • Necropolis by Micheal Dempsey
  • Runestaff by Michael Moorcock
  • Capital and its Discontents by Sasha Lilley
  • Manufacturing Hysteria by Jay Feldman
  • The End of Christianity edited by John Loftus
  • Vampire Wars by Steven Savile
  • Shadowline by Glen Cook
  • Camber of Culdi by Katherine Kurtz

So, how does it work? Just leave a comment on any post in the upcoming month(s) and your name will be entered into the drawing to get a book. I’ll be giving two or three away every week!

Going Digital: Books

Maybe a fifth of the books I removed from my library...

D and I are moving in the fall to the San Diego area; she got a job doing science stuff at the University of California there. The move is still a few months away but the two of us have started looking around at all of our stuff and asking ourselves, “Do I want to cart this across the state?” For a surprisingly large amount of things the answer is, “no, I don’t.” This is especially true for books now that I have a kindle. As I looked over my bookshelves I noticed that a great deal of the books on the shelves were over 100 years old and they were now in the public domain. With the kindle (or my computer) I can have access to those books without having them take up all this physical space. I did this over a decade ago with my music collection and had been putting it off with books because I love them so and the technology just wasn’t there yet, that isn’t the case anymore. So, I started sorting…

I know what you’re saying! Getting rid of books is a crime. I used to think so to, but what I really love about a book is not the binding, or the paper, or the ink though with some books those are very nice things. What I love about a book is that it allows me to experience another person’s thoughts and ideas. That is what makes books amazing and for their time they were the most efficient and effective way to spread ideas. That isn’t the case anymore though.

Another pile of books that I no longer need to have around physically

For every book that I knew I wanted to keep I checked Amazon’s Kindle store and Project Gutenberg; if a free copy existed I downloaded it and set the book aside. For every book that I wanted to keep but there wasn’t a free version available on-line I looked for a $0.99 version. If there was one I purchased it. I splurged a few times and spent $1.99 or $2.99 for a digital collection that would replace multiple physical books. After I had downloaded all the books I was going to I went back to the stack of books and started entering them into Amazon’s Trade-in store to see if Amazon was interested in buying a copy from me. Every book Amazon wanted went into a box to ship to them, every book they didn’t went into another stack. At the end of that process I had one 40 pd box of books to send to Amazon and another stack to put up on Freecycle.

All these classics now take up less than 5 megabytes on my hard drive

Amazon offered me $78.81 for all those books. I spent $12.93 picking up digital editions. That’s a net gain of $65.88!

 

EDIT: I made a second pass through my library and found more books that are available digitally, so I repeated the process and sent off another box to Amazon! This time they’re giving me $27.42

Having so few physical books means I can cover my walls with art instead of bookshelves

In the last week I’ve eliminated two entire bookshelves worth of books! The now empty bookshelves have gone up on Craigslist.

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