Where to Find Free Kindle Books

When I deleted a lot of old Free and Sale Kindle Book posts, I accidentally deleted this one as well. I am reposting it because I think it is still helpful.  If you have any suggestions to add, let me know.

______________
Since I am going to cut way back on my blogging for the short term, I thought I would post about where I find free kindle books.

downloadBecause Amazon made some changes to their affiliate programs a many websites or bloggers have cut back on their free books. But I also think free books have declined in popularity. Last year I averaged about 4000 free book “˜purchases’ a month. This year I am averaging about 2000.

There are three main types of sites. The first is the Christian focused Kindle blog sites. The three best of those are GospelEbooks, which posts daily in the morning. Usually not more than one or two free books a day. Vessel Project is similar but often posts once in the morning and once at night. The third is Thrifty Christian Reader, which is run by Chris Smith of the Englewood Review of Books. These posts are more occasional and run a bit more literary. (Update: Chris Smith has really started increasing his posts and even includes sale print books occasionally.)

Kindle PaperwhiteThe second type is the general free kindle book blogs. A lot of them have shut down and the only reliable one I know of is ereaderiq. You can have it send a daily email (the others above do this as well) focused just on your interest. But this requires that the books are properly categorized by the author or publisher. Ereaderiq is also the best place to track prices of books.  This is the link for religious books (not all Christian). Ereaderiq is also the best place to track the price of non-free books.

The third type is the publisher free book links, social media accounts or emails. Usually these are a mix of free and sale ebooks because publishers need to make money. David C Cook has 4 or 5 free books a week, usually for only one to two days. Baker Publishing usually has 10 to 20 for a month at a time (this includes Baker, Baker Academic, Bethany House and Revell.) Destiny Image has an email. Others may have occasional sales which you might be able to find via official publisher social media sites.

Read more

5000th Post

This is the 5000th Bookwi.se post. I have decided to delete free and sale book posts that are more than 50 days old, so there are just under 1700 posts still active (nearly 1300 book reviews, about 50 tips or kindle review posts, some recent sale and free book posts and a bunch of uncategorized posts that … Read more

The New Testament: A Very Short Introduction by Luke Timothy Johnson

The New Testament: A Very Short Introduction by Luke Timothy JohnsonSummary: A great overview of the New Testament in less than 150 pages.

I love the idea of the Very Short Introduction series. Short books, around 150 pages, written by experts in the field for a general reader that has little or no background in the field. The reality is that the series (now over 300 books) is wildly inconsistent. Luckily, this is one of the better from the series that I have read, not as good as Mark Noll’s book on Protestantism, which is the best in the series that I have read, but it is close.

My main complaint about the Very Short Introduction to the Bible is that it did not talk at all about the content of the bible. Luke Timothy Johnson spends the majority of time in this book on content. Much of that is focused on the synoptic gospels. Then there is an overview of Paul, with an in-depth look at of Paul and an overview of Johannine books (including the Gospel of John and Revelations).

Read more

Gilead: A Novel by Marilynne Robinson (2nd Reading)

Gilead cover imageTakeaway: Pastoral wisdom like this is rare.

Lila (the third of the trilogy that starts with Gilead) came out just over a year ago. I read it immediately and then reread it about a month later. It is in my short list of best books I have read.

It has been three years since I read Gilead, and while I remember enjoying it, I wanted to reread it before I went back and read the second novel of this trilogy (Home).

Gilead is a slow novel. I can understand why people would not like it. There is a story, but the action is almost entirely internal. John Ames is a 76-year-old pastor in a small Iowa town. Late in life, he married Lila, and they had a son. John has been having heart problems, and he has been told to prepare for death. So the book is a series of letters (no real chapters, just pauses between letters) to his son about his life and what he thinks is important about the world.

Read more

A Prayer Journal by Flannery O’Connor

A Prayer Journal by Flannery O'ConnorSummary: A slim volume of prayers by a young writer in training, seeking after God for her vocation.

A Prayer Journal by Flannery O’Connor made a splash when it was released at the end of 2013.

This slim volume (I read almost all of it in a single sitting) is exactly what the title says, an edited version of a prayer journal that O’Connor wrote while she was a student at University of Iowa.

At the center of this book are lots of variations of this prayer, “Dear God please help me to be an artist, please let it lead to You.” She wanted to be a writer, a good writer and one that pointed to her faith.

Read more

The Ocean at the End of the Lane: A Novel by Neil Gaiman (2nd Reading)

The Kindle Edition is $1.99 on Dec 18th only.
Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil GaimanTakeaway: The world of adults can be scary for children.

I have read, and in most cases re-read, all of Neil Gaiman’s adult novels. (I have read most of his children’s books and some of his short stories as well, but none of his graphic novels.)

Neil Gaiman continues to be one of my favorite modern novelists. And he is definitely among my favorite audiobook narrators. (As an aside he has a free audiobook of A Christmas Carol if you are interested.)

The Ocean at the End of the Lane is hard to categorize. It is mostly about a child, written in the voice of the man reflecting back on that childhood. Its’ outward form is a spooky fairy tale.

Read more

The Listening Life: Embracing Attentiveness in a World of Distraction by Adam McHugh

The Listening Life Embracing Attentiveness in a World of Distraction by Adam McHughTakeaway: “Hearing is an act of the senses, but listening is an act of the will.”

I have been looking forward to this book for a while now. Adam McHugh’s first book, Introverts in the Church, was extremely helpful to me as an introvert that also deeply loves the church.

“Listening ought to be at the heart of our spirituality, our relationships, our mission as the body of Christ, our relationship to culture and the world. We are invited to approach everything with the goal of listening first. We are called to participate in the listening life.”

I probably should have expected that much of The Listening Life would be about listening to God, but I did not. After an introduction, there are three chapters on listening in relation to God, how God, as King, listens to us, how we should listen to God and how scripture helps us better hear God.

“In a sense, the Scriptures are a tuning fork for adjusting our ears to the tone of God’s voice. It attunes us to the quality, the pitch and the cadence of God’s voice, and to the character that his voice expresses, so that we can identify his true voice over false ones.”

Throughout the book, McHugh keeps reminding us that listening is part of being a Christian, part of being mature, part of being fulfilling our created role as humans.

The strongest chapter (or at least the one that was the reason I purchased a couple copies to give away) is the chapter on listening to people in pain.

Read more

Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert O’Brien

Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert O'BrienSummary: A mother risks her own safety to protect her children.

I was about 9 when the movie version, The Secret of NIMH came out. I remember seeing it in the theater, and I think that was only time I saw it. So I was a bit vague on the details of the story when I picked up the audiobook.

Mrs Frisby is a field mouse widow. Her husband died the previous year, but as a family they are doing fairly well. They have a warm winter house in the garden field where food is abundant, even if it is monotonous. Spring is coming soon and the family will move to their summer house by the creek.

However, when one of Mrs Frisby’s children gets pneumonia, things suddenly become dangerous. The family cannot move because of a very sick child. But they have to move because the field will be plowed soon and if they stay they will all likely die.

Read more