Where You Can Buy English Books When You Go Overseas Country

01310674811_hpim3853.jpgI love reading. I probably read more than the average person. I spend hours reading both computer technical books and books for entertainment. When I first came to Thailand, one thing I had to really get used to is the lack of reading paper books. There are many bookstores but few have a large selection of English print titles. Back home in the States, I had a fairly large library of technical books…mostly Cisco Press and Sybex books on networking. My fiction reading was mostly quenched by going to a Barnes & Noble or Boarders book store…or to the Chicago Public library off of State and Congress when I lived there.

Now I have just a handful of paper books and the bookstores/libraries here are limited as to any English language books. Fortunately, we live in a digital media age where most books can be found online either for free, for a fee per-book or through a book club membership where you can “checkout” virtual books for a monthly fee.

I use Amazon’s Kindle applications for my recreational reading. I tried both the Kindle and Barnes & Noble iPhone apps and found that the Kindle app was a bit more user friendly. Using Amazon or any other online bookstore for recreational reading can be expensive if you want to read all the latest books. Considering I typically wait until a book comes out on paperback before I purchase it, E-books are fairly expensive at $12-20 each. Fortunately, Amazon offers many books for free. Many of these books are “classics”. For years I’ve said I want to go back and read many of the classic books that I missed growing up. Now I’m able to do so in a digital format. For example, I recently finished reading “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea” by Jules Verne. It didn’t cost me a cent. I have purchased several books through the Kindle app such as the new Dan Brown book “The Lost Symbol”.

Just a day before the Apple iPad was announced along with the iTunes bookstore, Amazon released a Kindle application for Windows and Mac OS X which lets you read kindle books on your PC or MAC. This is a nice addition and comes in handy for extended readings. The Kindle application is available for other mobile platforms including Android and Blackberry and even the iPad itself.

I have considered buying both the Kindle E-Reader and iPad but honestly, they’re too big for me. I like the ability of having books in my pocket. The fewer gadgets I carry around, the better. The screen size of the iPhone really isn’t that bad at all and the Kindle app options gives you the opportunity to customize the text size, text color and background colors to suit your preference and lighting conditions. I do much of my recreational reading in the dark before bed and find that white text on a black background is the least straining for my eyes.

For my technical needs, I use Safari Books Online. This is an online book “club” where you pay a monthly fee (annual fees also available) and can checkout technical books from most of the major publishers including Cisco Press, Sybex, O’Reilly and Prentice Hall. All the big players in the IT field are represented here.

My particular subscription costs $22.99 a month for “10 slot” bookshelf and 5 download tokens a month. A download token lets you download the PDF of a single chapter or section of the book that is in your bookshelf. Here’s a screen capture of My CCNA Voice Study Guide in my bookshelf:

One can purchase additional tokens…$10 for 5 tokens but I’ve never needed to buy any more as the tokens accumulate for up to 3 months and I typically only download 2-3 chapters a months.

For a very brief time, Safari had an iPhone app on the iTunes store but it’s no longer available. The app was available before Apple had their own book store so it probably was removed due to a conflict with Apple’s book store or some copy-write issues with one or more publishers.

Tips for Starting an Online Bookstore

11310674806_barnes-noble.jpgThere are both pros and cons when it comes to starting an online bookstore. It is much easier than offline in many respects, so why not give your dream a try? Maybe my story will help you decide.

Finding your carefully researched niche is important for several reasons. With the likes of Amazon and Barnes and Noble as competition, you have to carve out a very specific small piece of the online bookstore pie and serve it with whipping cream. By that I mean, you have to create a very focused smaller bookstore that offers something that bigger websites don’t have – a very warm, personal touch.

The Pros of Owning an Online Bookstore

I have chosen affiliate programs as the basis of my bookstore because I don’t have to deal with receiving payments, accepting credit cards, processing orders, storing inventory, taking back orders, shipping, and so on and on.

I have my own website, customized and under my control, I don’t have to dress up, do my hair, makeup etc. to go to work, my store is open 24/7/365 to customers around the world, I never meet cranky people face to face (just sometimes in emails!) and my store is private and always peaceful (no cranky kids!).

Faced with a decision between two ideas for how to run my store, I chose option #1. I can simply fill my site with quality, relevant content pages and encourage visitors to click through to the merchant’s website to purchase, or I can use a data feed to create a carbon copy of the original store on my website. My main job is to write unique content and to build my site quickly. It needs to update automatically. Visitors then don’t need to leave my website to make their purchases.

The Cons of Owning an Online Bookstore

Of course there are always arguments against shopping online; the cons are that bookstores provide a wonderful customer experience. Maybe you like getting out to book signings, listening to authors read passages, and sitting down in a comfy chair with a stack of books to decide first-hand what you want to buy. And of course, online sites malfunction more often than stores have to unexpectedly close.

Affiliate marketers need to write content that overcome the obstacles potential customers present: their lack of trust, annoyance with difficulties, and reluctance to make that final click.

If your customer knows exactly what they want, no problem, but if they want to “window shop” the process can be painfully slow as they move from page to page. If they like to “scan and let something pop out at them”, they can become frustrated at only being able to view what fits on one page at a time.

When it’s time to pull out the plastic, they may question the security of ordering with their card online, wonder if they want to pay high shipping costs, and what happens if they need to return an order?

How I Made My Decision

Most of the cons can be compensated for or avoided by careful choosing of affiliate programs. Few online book companies simply offer books. They also offer reviews, contests, coupons, and ways to participate in what feels like a community.

Website design with care taken to make navigation clear and simple can make browsing and comparison shopping easier and of course stores with great track records, testimonials, and security in place make all the difference with consumer confidence.

For me, love of my niche combined with love of books convinced me that I’d made a great choice, and success is almost assured as my next love, writing, makes it easy to write book reviews. Everyone is different; some need face to face contact with people, others need hands-on contact with products. If what I’ve said is true for you too, maybe a website store is for you.

Celebrate Abundance: Conquer Your Fears With Thanksgiving

21310674810_picture302.jpgPerhaps the most well-known quote on fear comes from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. In his first inaugural address on March 4, 1933, Roosevelt said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” His wife, Eleanor Roosevelt, also gave us a memorable quote on fear. “You gain strength, courage, and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face,” she said. “You must do the thing which you think you cannot do.”

Many of us have fears. A fear that says things will never change, that they can’t possibly improve. A fear that says you are helpless; and your situation, hopeless. Maybe you fear that your prayers won’t get answered, or that God has forgotten you. But it’s not true. “I am with you always,” Jesus told his disciples (Matthew 28:20). And He is with every man and woman who puts their trust in Him.

In biblical times, Israel had nothing to fear. And Christians have nothing to fear today. God assures us, as He assured Israel (Isaiah 41:10): “Fear not, for I am with you….”

“Celebrating abundance is the best antidote I know for fear,” Candy Paull writes in The Art of Abundance. Paull says abundance is not how much you own, but how much you appreciate. Simply look at what you already have. Consider the old hymn by Johnson Oatman, Jr., which Edwin O. Excell set to music and published in 1897:
“When upon life’s billows you are tempest tossed,
When you are discouraged, thinking all is lost,
Count your many blessings; name them one by one,
And it will surprise you what the Lord hath done.”
To conquer your fears and celebrate abundance in your life, count your blessings before God. Paull suggests a little game she calls “Abundance is….” It’s a game of thankfulness, gratitude, and praise that anyone can play. Start with the basics, the little things for which you are thankful. Then think of things that hold potential and promise. Here’s how I celebrated my abundance today:

Abundance is…a gentle breeze on a glorious autumn afternoon.

Abundance is…a field of yellow and red fire wheels along a country path.

Abundance is…hearing my favorite Third Day song on the radio.

Abundance is…a slice of pecan pie.

Abundance is…a handwritten letter in my mailbox.

Abundance is…my husband’s fingers intertwined with mine.

Abundance is…my new kitten sleeping on the windowsill, basking in the sun.

Abundance is…a telephone call from my teenage stepson.

Abundance is…Ingrid Bergman and Curt Jurgens in a scene from The Inn of the Sixth Happiness.

Abundance is…walking into a Barnes and Noble bookstore.

Abundance is…a brilliant double rainbow after a thunderstorm.

Abundance is a great quote, like those from the Roosevelt’s. Or from mystery writer Agatha Christie, who wrote, “I like living. I have sometimes been wildly, despairingly, acutely miserable, racked with sorrow, but through it all I still know quite certainly that just to be alive is a grand thing.”
Follow Candy Paull’s suggestion and “open your eyes to the world you live in.” Celebrating abundance will conquer your fears, renew your spirit, and refresh your heart.
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