Why third-chance book reviews? Well, why not? Authors work hard to create their books -- sometimes one, two, three, or even more years. Then their books are published, put on display in bookstores, only to be unceremoniously yanked from the shelves a few weeks later to make way for newer books.
Meanwhile, newspapers and magazines are eliminating book reviews or tightening up on the number of reviews they publish, on paper or online, to try to cut costs as they struggle to survive. Thus, it is getting tougher and tougher for authors to get their books reviewed anywhere.
If your book doesn't get reviewed right away, it rarely gets a second chance. And after it has been on the market for a year or two, it has almost zero chance of getting reviewed, except on a book-review blog. These days, the shelf life of a book is much shorter than the time it takes to create it.
Hence, Third-Chance Book Reviews. It offers one more opportunity for a few books to get reviewed.
To be honest, I am an old-fashioned book reviewer who is now in mortal danger of becoming unemployed in the dwindling world of print media. After many years of reviewing books in newspapers, magazines and literary journals, I have started this book review blog as a means of self-defense. It also reflects my longtime desire to help keep books -- words printed on actual paper -- in front of readers.
Much of my bias, initially, will be on books about the American West and Southwest or written by authors who live in the American West or Southwest. These types of books have been my speciality for about 25 years.
But I intend to expand my coverage to any and all types of books that interest me and entertain me.
I will not review books that I dislike. I will only post brief reviews of books that I have found interesting and entertaining and think others might like, too.
Likewise, I won't post "paid" reviews. If a particular book grabs your interest, I hope you will click on the link posted in the blog. It will take you to Amazon.com. If you buy the book via that link, I will make a few cents from the transaction. If you don't like that arrangement, just go to Amazon.com, search for the title and make your best deal.
Thank you in advance for visiting Third-Chance Book Reviews, and thank you for considering some of the books I have chosen to review.
Si Dunn
Third-Chance Book Reviews
Sagecreek Productions LLC
Monday, March 30, 2009
New Blog: Third-Chance Book Reviews
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Labels: authors, book reviews, books, Mayborn Literary Nonfiction Writers Conference, publishers, publishing, reviews
Friday, March 27, 2009
Volunteer to Fight for the U.S. Economy
Things now are officially so bad in the Great Recession that those of us near the bottom of the economic food chain need to start doing something--anything!--to try to fuel a recovery from the bottom up.
President Obama and the Democrats on Capitol Hill--with almost no constructive help from the Republicans--are struggling to do what they can, within the painfully slow, inefficient and chaotic framework of U.S. politics.
Meanwhile, many among us are suffering and getting their butts kicked. We need to try to help them, today.
Can you start a business, no matter how small? Can you create a job, even part-time, temporary or something for a consultant to do? Can you do it today?
Will you do it today?
Can you buy something extra? (It almost doesn't matter what: a latte, a Lamborghini, a Lava soap bar, a lava lamp, a leg waxing, a loaf of bread.) Almost anything you buy can help save or create a job. Can you buy something today?
Will you do it today?
Can you use and pay for somebody's service? Get the gutters cleaned, get a bicycle repaired, get a haircut, get a pizza delivered--today?
Will you do it today?
Can you donate money or food to a food bank and clothes, unneeded tools and other useful items to Goodwill, the Salvation Army and other organizations and agencies in your community? Can you do it today?
Will you do it today?
And don't forget churches, whether you attend or not. Many churches now are struggling to keep unemployed members, parishioners and strangers afloat even as they try to keep their own doors open, too. Can you donate a few bucks to one or more of them today?
Will you do it today?
Anything and everything we can comfortably afford to do needs to be done...today. Now. Immediately.
Do it today.
Start pushing the economic recovery from the bottom up and keep pushing. Do it today.
Maybe those at the pinnacle of the economic food chain soon will learn how to stop playing "gotcha" games (we can only hope) and start helping push recovery dollars downward where they are now desperately needed.
And maybe we'll all meet in the middle soon and hope things never get out of control like this again.
But it all starts by doing something today.
-- Si Dunn
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Labels: Democrats, economic crisis, economy, Goodwill, Great Recession, President Obama, recession, Republicans, Salvation Army
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Republicans Confirm Move to Parallel Universe
WASHINGTON (D:O) -- While their party leaders proudly unveiled the presentation folders for their details-to-follow "Road to Recovery" budget alternative, anonymous sources within the Republican Party quietly conceded today that the GOP soon will move "lock, stock and barrel of tax cuts" to a separate universe "where no one can ever again attack our plan as the 'Road to Ruin.'"
One source explained: "We're moving everybody and everything--within certain limits--to a much better world. It's a parallel universe where no one will ever have to pay taxes, and there are no pesky poor people, homeless veterans and unemployed middle-class families to gum up our strategies. It's a world open to those solid citizens who make $100,ooo and up, on a steady basis."
The name of the parallel universe, the source added, is still being debated within party circles.
"Some want to call it 'Rushmore,' and some want to call it 'Jindalville.'" A conference committee is attempting to come up with a compromise, another GOP source emphasized.
Not everyone likes the move, the second anonymous source conceded. "A number of Republicans who make less than $100,000 say they feel betrayed and may become Democrats. Or Libertarians. Or Communists. Their point is that they can't stay in the Republican Party if it insists on leaving them behind in this reality."
-- B.W. "Blanque" Page, Washington correspondent for Dateline:Oblivion.
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Labels: Bobby Jindal, Democrats, parallel universe, Republicans, Road to Recovery, Rush Limbaugh
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
The Republican Ticket from Hell
According to CNN Political Ticker, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is defending Republicans who want President Barack Obama to fail. He has joined conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh in wishing aloud that the President's efforts to rescue the American economy will flounder, so that millions upon millions of people will suffer and somehow, magically, sweep the G(NO!)P back into power.
So, there you have it: The G(NO!)P ticket in 2012 will be Jindal/Limbaugh or Limbaugh/Jindal.
Either way, it will be the political ticket from hell.
Gov. Jindal and radio-mouth Limbaugh keep talking past the point that if the President's efforts fail, the havoc set in motion by the Bush era (and the Bush errors) will leave the nation severely damaged, and much of the resulting destruction will be directly tied to, and properly blamed upon, Republicans' obstructionism and resistance in this time of crisis.
"NO!" is not an economic plan. But it will look great on campaign bumperstickers: "Bobby & Rush in 2012? Just Say NO!"
-- Si Dunn
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Labels: 2012 election, Barack Obama, Boibby Jindal, CNN, Democrats, economic plan, Republicans, Rush Limbaugh
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Health Insurance? Help Us Afford It
The Associated Press has reported that the health insurance industry is offering "for the first time to curb its controversial practice of charging higher premiums to people with a history of medical problems."
If you've ever had a medical problem, then lost a job or started a small business and tried to buy individual health coverage, you likely have run into this little problem:
If you need it, you really can't afford it.
Republicans have long pushed for "market solutions" to the health insurance problem. And the "solutions" the market keeps delivering tend to be priced somewhere beyond sky-high.
According to the AP article posted by CBS News, "[a]bout 7 percent of Americans buy their coverage as individuals, while more than 60 percent have job-based insurance."
The percentage for individuals likely would be much higher if monthly premiums for health insurance did not rival or exceed mortgage payments and car payments. Meanwhile, people with employer-provided health insurance are paying sharply higher premiums and co-payments and getting squeezed hard, too.
"The offer here is to transition away from risk rating, which is one of the things that makes life hell for real people," health economist Len Nichols of the New America Foundation public policy center told the AP. "They have never in their history offered to give up risk rating."
According to the AP report on the CBS News site, insurers hope to head off the creation of a government insurance plan that would compete with them, something that liberals and many Democrats are pressing for.
The AP report did not mention that Republicans long have opposed government-sponsored health insurance plans, touting vague "market solutions," instead. These are the same "market solutions" that have helped keep many of the 47 million or so uninsured Americans priced out of the health-insurance market and in the "if you need it, you can't afford it" category.
The current offers from the insurance industry fall short in one very big category: small business, which creates the vast majority of new jobs in the American economy. Small businesses, under the new proposal, would have to keep paying higher premiums and deal with risk ratings. One sick employee could send premiums through the roof.
So the news on risk ratings seems to be significant, but now is not the time for the Obama Administration to ease off on its health-insurance plans. If anything, the White House needs to ratchet up its proposals and keep holding the health-insurance industry's feet to the fire.
-- Si Dunn
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Labels: AP, Associated Press, CBS News, Democrats, health insurance, health problems, health-insurance industry, liberals, Obama Administration, Republicans, White House
Monday, March 23, 2009
Is 65 the New 35?
My 65th birthday rolls around tomorrow, and I still feel as if I am 35. Or younger.
Inside my head, at least.
Yeah, some of my moving parts now grind, click and rattle. And I've had some issues that a few bits of surgery (okay, a couple of BIG bits) have been able to repair.
Life at 65 is a bit more of a chemical balancing act than I expected it would be. Pills for this, pills for that. Keep this down; keep that up. But, hey, the pills work, and life goes on. I remain full of ideas, ambitions, energy, drive, vitality--and even youthful stupidity, sometimes.
Some mornings when I drag (albeit more slowly) out of bed, I do joke that 65 is the new 64. Or the new 75. But inside my head, I still feel as if I am 35--or younger.
Tomorrow, I turn 65. And so what? I'm retired but still working part-time, mostly because I like having a small busisness. My wife still loves me. I love her madly, too. And my head and heart remain full of goals and curiosity and causes. And songs.
Life is good. Indeed, I think life at 65 is much better than it ever was when I was 35.
-- Si Dunn
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Labels: 35, 65, happiness, life, love, Medicare, Social Security, songs
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Stimulating New Jobs: Where's the Leadership?
New York Times columnist Frank Rich got it exactly right when he stated:
"As the nation’s anger rose last week, the president took responsibility for what’s happening on his watch — more than he needed to, given the disaster he inherited. But in the credit mess, action must match words. To fall short would be to deliver us into the catastrophic hands of a Republican opposition whose only known economic program is to reject job-creating stimulus spending and root for Obama and, by extension, the country to fail. With all due deference to Ponzi schemers from Madoff to A.I.G., this would be the biggest outrage of them all."
Anger did rise, and it's still boiling up. There should be more job-creating stimulus spending now and more focus on the "real" people in the American economy: workers, mid-level and low-level managers, small-business owners and entrepreneurs starting new companies.
Yes, the appalling problems in the upper levels of the American economy must be fixed. At the same time, it is vital to deal with the difficulties, challenges and economic emergencies now facing people below the rank of "Master of the Universe." Specifically, emergency focus now should be given to Main Street and rural America, as well.
Where are the Congressional and White House leaders who can cut through the bailout noise and be stronger--and louder--advocates for the millions of Americans struggling in the heartland? These layoff victims need jobs now and can't find any, and thousands of small businesses who could hire them are unable to get crucial loans.
"Congress and the White House Team Up to Tackle Middle America's Deepening Crisis" -- that should (but won't) be tomorrow's big headline.
-- Si Dunn
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Labels: banking system, Congress, economic crisis, jobs, The New York Times, Washington, White House