Doctor Sleep Audio Book, by Stephen King

Doctor Sleep Jacket CoverSTEPHEN KING at his best….AGAIN!! If you are a fan of, The Shining, you will LOVE King’s sequel “Doctor Sleep”! It promises to be an exercise in mental stimulation as it intertwines the psychic world in which Danny (now grown) resides and the demonic presence of vampires. One can only imagine the intricately woven surprises that King has given his avid fans in this new novel. As you conjure images in your mind, you might actually be previewing the next great Stephen King movie.

You can get your digital audiobook copy of “Doctor Sleep” today, if you dare…

The Longest Ride Audio Book, by Nicholas Sparks

The Longest Ride Jacket CoverWe all know Nicholas Sparks as the American Novelist, screenwriter and producer of amazing books such as The Notebook. It is in all likelihood, a true favorite of all those who have read the novel and/or saw the great movie. That story took the reader from highs of true young love to the lows of heartbreak. With the release of The Longest Ride, Sparks promises to give another storyline that is replete with long time love characters and also the excitement of a couple in the throws of new, young love. The romantic fiction style of Sparks, using the beautiful setting of southern Blue Ridge Appalachia will not disappoint romance enthusiasts. The Longest Ride is due to join other screenplays by Sparks. Those include the previously mentioned, The Notebook and more recently, Safe Haven with many in between. A February 2015 release date is expected.

The Butler

The Butler Jacket Cover The controversial new movie “The Butler” opened nationwide in theaters last Friday. The audiobook version of the story is now available at AudiobooksNow and is read by Forest Whitaker, Oprah Wimphrey and David Oyelowo.

The story is based on character, Cecil Gaines tenure serving as a butler in the White House during eight presidencies. He is witness to not only dramatic events in American history, such as the Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War, but personal issues for each President and their families. One could compare the exposure to such private familial situations as being the proverbial “fly on the wall”! The novel takes literary freedom in using actual events and expanding them for added drama.

You can get your digital audiobook copy of The Butler right now at AudiobooksNow!

Over 1,100 Macmillan Audio Titles Added

AudiobooksNow has just added over 1,100 titles by Macmillan Audio to its catalog. With the addition of Macmillan, AudiobooksNow now offer more than 18,000 premium audiobooks. Some of Macmillan’s popular authors include Janet Evanovich, Robert Jordan, Douglas Preston, Lisa Scottoline, Michael Palmer, Bill O’Reilly, Richard North Patterson, and P. C. Cast just to name a few.

One of Macmillan’s most popular audiobooks is the sci-fi cult classic Ender’s Game. The much anticipated movie for the book is set for theaters on November 1st and the final trailer for the movie was just released this past week.

The Cuckoo’s Calling by?

The Cuckoo's Calling Jacket CoverThe Cuckoo’s Calling by Robert Galbraith, J. K. Rowling.  Everyone thought this book by an unknown author was just to good to be his first book, and they were right.  The Cuckoo’s Calling is a crime novel by J. K. Rowling, published under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith.  Rowling’s says she did not want any hype with the release of this book after her wildly successful Harry Potter series.  Well, she may not have received any hype when the book was released, but boy is she getting it now.

In a statement to The Sunday Times of London, Rowling confessed that she is indeed Galbraith: “I had hoped to keep this secret a little longer, because being Robert Galbraith has been such a liberating experience. It has been wonderful to publish without hype or expectation, and pure pleasure to get feedback under a different name.”

You can get your digital audiobook copy of The Cuckoo’s Calling right now at AudiobooksNow!

A Week of Armchair Travel

Following the Equator bookTravel books have a wide appeal, to actual travelers, potential travelers and simple armchair explorers.

Pack your bags… and head for your armchair!

Classic Travel Books

There are so many classic travel books, and recommending a single one is hard. So I’ll go to yet another list of great travel books – remember the Daily Telegraph list we saw –  let’s go to that for Eric Newby’s  A Short walk in the Hindu Kush.

” — but readers of the much-loved book are recompensed with a hilarious segment that recounts a mountain-side encounter with the adventurer Wilfred Thesiger: “We started to blow up our air-beds. ‘God, you must be a couple of pansies,’ said Thesiger.”

Want an audiobook? How about Mark Twain’s Following the Equator, about his Pacific journey. Twain told us the travel is fatal to prejudice, and here we get some of his wry reflections on the world.

Travel Memoirs

Bill Bryson is the funniest writer working today. That’s my opinion. He has traveled widely, lived in Britain and the US, and written about science, language and, of course, travel.

My extra- special favorite Bryson book is “A Walk in the Woods”, the tale of an overweight middle-aged man (being Bryson) and his even more out of shape childhood friend Stephen Katz, as they kike the Appalachian Trail from Georgia to Maine.

But don’t trust me. The Book Haven has a great review of it. Buy it where you buy good books. For an audiobook of the same journey by someone else entirely, listen to David Miller’s  AWOL on the Applachian Trail.

Adventure – in Style and On the Cheap

We all love adventures. Some of us want to go on them. Some of us recall adventures we’ve been on with pleasure or “What was I thinking?”  – I say this as a suburban officer-dweller who helped move a bus stuck in a streambed in the Andes, 16,000 feet above sea level. Some of us simply want to read about other people’s adventures.

Guides to adventure travel come in two varieties . There are the backpacker, Nepal-on-a-budget guides that are strong on youth hostels, environmentalism and places to eat for an American dollar. Lonely Planet is very strong in this area. Here’s that book on Nepal. But you can also go to Bolivia, or Sri Lanka, or Botswana.

For those of us who aren’t twenty two anymore, and are happy to trade a bit more money – okay a  lot more money – you can do the eco-tourist thing in the world’s rainforests, or play Ernest Hemingway and go on a safari. These days safaris are almost all photography-based. You have to be very rich to go and shoot wildlife, and people will think poorly of you, and deride your manhood. Try Fodor’s The Complete African Safari Planner. This is from Amazon.

Where to Eat in Ouaggadougou

One of the main reasons to travel is to eat. If you ask me about the time I visited the amazing rebuilt medieval city of Carcassonne, destroyed by a French crusades against the Cathar heretics in the early thirteenth century, I will tell you about the Vietnamese restaurant where I could not – not – get the waiter to bring the check. I can tell you about why you should not eat the sausage sandwich at a particular British motorway cafe (because it’s disgusting) and why you should not eat the cuy in the Andes (because guinea pigs are cute).

The Travel Channel features almost no shows about travel that aren’t really about eating.

Your standard guidebook will suggest some places to eat, along with where to stay and what to see. But if you are going to a big city, that list of six restaurants (two cheap, two medium-priced, two expensive) isn’t enough. You need a real foodie guide. Try Zagat, whose restaurant guides also feature maps, city info and reviews from recent diners.

I could give you Zagat’s guide to new Jersey, but let’s go to Paris instead. The driving is about the same, but the food is better.

No, I don’t know where to eat in Ouaggadougou. I have never vacationed in Burkina Faso.