Review: Mama's Money Savers

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Time to highlight another great blogger. Today we are highlighting Mama's Money Savers. This is a blog with a very busy side bar, but some great information between them. A mix of advertisement blogs and quality posts, about places you can get stuff for free, get coupons, or make money online. Interesting blog. I found out some new sites that I'm going to check out and perhaps blog about. Those busy side bars I mentioned. The seem to go on forever with every site she has ever signed up on, somewhere on the bar. They are in some sort of order, but they look like they are just tossed up there in any old fashion. Despite that, I looked them over and found some things that I'm signing up on. Hopefully some of those sites will help here and allow us to have a few more contests of our own.

Blood Lines by Mel Odom



It is time to play a Wild Card! Every now and then, a book that I have chosen to read is going to pop up as a FIRST Wild Card Tour. Get dealt into the game! (Just click the button!) Wild Card Tours feature an author and his/her book's FIRST chapter!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

Sorry about the lack of review on this one. I didn't get around to reading it. I'd really like to and will review it after I do.

Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


Blood Lines

Tyndale House Publishers (December 8, 2008)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Mel Odomis a best-selling author with many published works to his credit. Mel has been inducted into the Oklahoma Professional Writers Hall of Fame and received the Alex Award for his fantasy novel The Rover. Paid in Blood was the first book in Mel’s three-book Military NCIS series. He has also published four military thrillers with Tyndale House; Apocalypse Dawn, Apocalypse Crucible, Apocalypse Burning and Apocalypse Unleashed. Mel teaches courses in forensic investigation, crime-scene investigation, profiling, and cold-case investigation. Mel and his family reside in Oklahoma City.

Visit the author's website.

Product Details:

List Price: $13.99
Paperback: 432 pages
Publisher: Tyndale House Publishers (December 8, 2008)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1414316356
ISBN-13: 978-1414316352

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


Gymnasium

Camp Lejeune, North Carolina

1203 Hours

“Did you come here to play basketball or wage war?”

Shelton McHenry, gunnery sergeant in the United States Marine Corps, shook the sweat out of his eyes and ignored the question. After long minutes of hard exertion, his breath echoed inside his head and chest. His throat burned. Despite the air-conditioning, the gym felt hot. He put his hands on his head and sucked in a deep breath of air. It didn’t help. He still felt mean.

There was no other word for it. He wanted the workout provided by the game, but he wanted it for the physical confrontation rather than the exercise. He had hoped it would burn through the restless anger that rattled within him.

Normally when he got like this, he tried to stay away from other people. He would gather up Max, the black Labrador retriever that was his military canine partner, and go for a run along a secluded beach until he exhausted the emotion. Sometimes it took hours.

That anger had been part of him since he was a kid. He had never truly understood it, but he’d learned to master it—for the most part—a long time ago. But now and again, there were bad days when it got away from him. Usually those bad days were holidays.

Today was Father’s Day. It was the worst of all of them. Even Christmas, a time when families got together, wasn’t as bad as Father’s Day. During the heady rush of Christmas—muted by the sheer effort and logistics of getting from one place to another after another, of making sure presents for his brother’s kids were intact and wrapped and not forgotten, of preparing and consuming the endless supply of food—he could concentrate on something other than his father.

But not today. Never on Father’s Day.

The anger was bad enough, but the thing that totally wrecked him and kicked his butt was the guilt. Even though he didn’t know what to do, there was no escaping the fact that he should be doing something. He was supposed to be back home.

Usually he was stationed somewhere and could escape the guilt by making a quick phone call, offering up an apology, and losing himself back in the field. But after taking the MOS change to Naval Criminal Investigative Service, he was free on weekends unless the team was working a hot case.

At present, there were no hot cases on the horizon. There wasn’t even follow-up to anything else they’d been working on. He’d had no excuse for not going. Don, his brother, had called a few days ago to find out if Shel was coming. Shel had told him no but had offered no reason. Don had been kind enough not to ask why. So Shel was stuck with the anger, guilt, and frustration.

“You hearing me, gunney?”

Shel restrained the anger a step before it got loose. Over on the sidelines of the gym, Max gave a tentative bark. The Labrador paced uneasily, and Shel knew the dog sensed his mood.

Dial it down, he told himself. Just finish up here. Be glad you’re able to work through it.

He just wished it helped more.

“Yeah,” Shel said. “I hear you.”

“Good. ’Cause for a second there I thought you’d checked out on me.” Remy Gautreau mopped his face with his shirt.

He was young and black, hard-bodied but lean, where Shel looked like he’d been put together with four-by-fours. Gang tattoos in blue ink showed on Remy’s chest and abdomen when he’d lifted his shirt. Shel had noticed the tattoos before, but he hadn’t asked about them. Even after working together for more than a year, it wasn’t something soldiers talked about.

Before he’d entered the Navy and trained as a Navy SEAL, Remy Gautreau had been someone else. Most enlisted had. Then whatever branch of military service they signed on for changed them into someone else. The past was shed as easily as a snake lost its skin. Men and women were given a different present for that time and usually ended up with a different future than they would have had.

But they don’t take away the past, do they? Shel asked himself. They just pretend it never happened.

“Where you been?” Remy asked.

“Right here.” Shel broke eye contact with the other man. He could lie out in the field when it was necessary, but he had trouble lying to friends. “Playing center.”

Remy was part of the NCIS team that Shel was currently assigned to. His rank was chief petty officer. He wore bright orange knee-length basketball shorts and a white Tar Heels basketball jersey. Shel wore Marine-issue black shorts and a gray sweatshirt with the sleeves hacked off. Both men bore bullet and knife scars from previous battles.

The other group of players stood at their end of the basketball court. Other groups of men were waiting their turn.

Shel and Remy were playing iron man pickup basketball. The winning team got to stay on the court, but they had to keep winning. While they were getting more tired, each successive team rested up. Evading fatigue, learning to play four hard and let the fifth man rest on his feet, was a big part of staying on top. It was a lot like playing chess.

“You’ve been here,” Remy agreed in a soft voice. “But this ain’t where your head’s been. You just been visiting this game.”

“Guy’s good, Remy. I’m doing my best.”

The other team’s center was Del Greene, a giant at six feet eight inches tall—four inches taller than Shel. But he was more slender than Shel, turned better in the tight corners, and could get up higher on the boards. Rebounding the ball after each shot was an immense struggle, but once in position Shel was hard to move. He’d come down with his fair share of rebounds.

Basketball wasn’t Shel’s game. He’d played it all through high school, but football was his chosen gladiator’s field in the world of sports. He had played linebacker and had been offered a full-ride scholarship to a dozen different colleges. He had opted for the Marines instead. Anything to shake the dust of his father’s cattle ranch from his boots. None of the colleges had been far enough away for what he had wanted at the time. After all those years of misunderstandings on the ranch, Shel had just wanted to be gone.

“You’re doing great against that guy,” Remy said. “Better than I thought you would. He’s a better basketball player, but you’re a better thinker. You’re shutting him down. Which is part of the problem. You’re taking his game away from him and it’s making him mad. Problem is, you got no finesse. He’s wearing you like a cheap shirt. If we had a referee for this game, you’d already have been tossed for personal fouls.”

“Yeah, well, he doesn’t play like a homecoming queen himself.” Shel wiped his mouth on his shirt. The material came away bloody. He had caught an elbow in the face last time that had split the inside of his cheek. “He’s not afraid of dishing it out.”

“Don’t get me wrong. I didn’t say that fool didn’t have it coming, but I am saying that this isn’t the time or the place for a grudge match.” Remy wiped his face with his shirt again. “The last thing we need is for Will to have to come down and get us out of the hoosegow over a basketball game. He’s already stressed over Father’s Day because he’s having to share his time with his kids’ new stepfather.”

Shel knew United States Navy Commander Will Coburn to be a fine man and officer. He had followed Will into several firefights during their years together on the NCIS team.

The marriage of Will’s ex-wife was only months old. Everyone on the team knew that Will had taken the marriage in stride as best as he could, but the change was still a lot to deal with. Having his kids involved only made things worse. Before, Father’s Day and Mother’s Day had been mutually exclusive. This year the kids’ mother had insisted that the day be shared between households.

One of the other players stepped forward. “Are we going to play ball? Or are you two just going to stand over there and hold hands?”

Shel felt that old smile—the one that didn’t belong and didn’t reflect anything that was going on inside him—curve his lips. That smile had gotten him into a lot of trouble with his daddy and had been a definite warning to his brother, Don.

The other team didn’t have a clue.

“The way you guys are playing,” Shel said as he stepped toward the other team, “I think we’ve got time to do both.”

Behind him, Shel heard Remy curse.

* * *

1229 Hours

At the offensive goal, Shel worked hard to break free of the other player’s defense. But every move he made, every step he took, Greene was on top of him. Shel knew basketball, but the other guy knew it better.

A small Hispanic guy named Melendez played point guard for Shel and Remy’s team. He flipped the ball around the perimeter with quick, short passes back and forth to the wings. Unable to get a shot off, Remy and the other wing kept passing the ball back.

Shel knew they wanted to get the ball inside to him if they could. They needed the basket to tie up the game. They were too tired to go back down the court and end up two buckets behind.

Melendez snuck a quick pass by the guard and got the ball to Shel. With a fast spin, Shel turned and tried to put the ball up. But as soon as it left his fingers, Greene slapped the shot away. Thankfully Melendez managed to recover the loose ball.

“Don’t you try to bring that trash in here,” Greene taunted. “This is my house. Nobody comes into my house.” Sweat dappled his dark features and his mocking smile showed white and clean. “You may be big, gunney, but you ain’t big enough. You hear what I’m saying?”

Shel tried to ignore the mocking voice and the fact that Greene was now bumping up against him even harder than before. The man wasn’t just taunting anymore. He was going for an all-out assault.

Melendez caught a screen from Remy and rolled out with the basketball before the other defensive player could pick him up. One of the key elements to their whole game was the fact that most of them had played ball before. Greene was a good player—maybe even a great player—but one man didn’t make a team. Special forces training taught a man that.

Free and open, Melendez put up a twenty-foot jump shot. Shel rolled around Greene to get the inside position for the rebound. Greene had gone up in an effort to deflect the basketball. He was out of position when he came back down.

Shel timed his jump as the basketball ran around the ring and fell off. He went up and intercepted the ball cleanly. He was trying to bring the ball in close when Greene stepped around him and punched the basketball with a closed fist.

The blow knocked the ball back into Shel’s face. It slammed against his nose and teeth hard enough to snap his head back. He tasted blood immediately and his eyes watered. The sudden onslaught of pain chipped away at the control that Shel had maintained. He turned instantly, and Greene stood ready and waiting. Two of the guys on his team fell in behind him.

“You don’t want none of this,” Greene crowed. “I promise you don’t want none of this.” He had his hands raised in front of him and stood in what Shel recognized as a martial arts stance.

Shel wasn’t big on martial arts. Most of his hand-to-hand combat ability had been picked up in the field and from men he had sparred with to increase his knowledge.

“You’re a big man,” Greene snarled, “but I’m badder.”

Despite the tension that had suddenly filled the gymnasium and the odds against him, Shel grinned. This was more along the lines of what he needed. He took a step forward.

Remy darted between them and put his hands up. “That’s it. Game’s over. We’re done here.”

“Then who wins the game?” another man asked.

“We win the game,” one of the men on Shel’s team said.

“Your big man fouled intentionally,” Melendez said. “That’s a forfeit in my book.”

“Good thing you ain’t keepin’ the book,” Greene said. He never broke eye contact with Shel. “Is that how you gonna call it, dawg? Gonna curl up like a little girl and cry? Or are you gonna man up and play ball?”

Remy turned to face the heckler. “Back off, clown. You don’t even know the trouble you’re trying to buy into.”

Greene was faster than Shel expected even after playing against the man. Before Remy could raise his hands to defend himself, Greene hit him in the face.

Driven by the blow, Remy staggered backward.



Copyright © 2008 by Mel Odom. All rights reserved

Happy Birthday Tired Garden

Tired Garden is a year old today! It has been a glorious year. The site has grown a lot and has made some changes. I hope it will continue to grow and that we can build the site up more. I've enjoyed my time spent talking with my readers and talking with other bloggers who do not read my blog much. It has been a great time!

In the year to come I am sure we will see even more changes. The site will, I hope, continue to grow and mature. I hope that my readership will increase and that you all will tell me what you want to see from me and I will be able to provide it. I pray for a fruitful year for all of us.

Actually, Tired Garden, the site, is older than a year old. March, 22 2007, so it is really nearly two years old. The site went through a major revision and rebirth from a crappy static site that was just about tired gardening to the more dynamic blog you see today. I lost the articles from that original site, so I count the beginning of the site to be when this version of the site began. Perhaps I will be able to dig up those old articles at some point and repost them. I had a couple of good tire gardening articles up there.

Anyway, if you want to wish me a happy birthday, chocolate or cash are both accepted :D. Thanks for the great year and I look forward to another.

Be Strong and Curvaceous by Shelley Adina



It is time to play a Wild Card! Every now and then, a book that I have chosen to read is going to pop up as a FIRST Wild Card Tour. Get dealt into the game! (Just click the button!) Wild Card Tours feature an author and his/her book's FIRST chapter!

You never know when I might play a wild card on you!

I started to read this book, but I was a little confused. I think I was missing some background that I would have gotten by the previous two books. It did seem interesting, but not really the fare that a big [cough] strong [cough] man like me would normally read.

Today's Wild Card author is:


and the book:


Be Strong and Curvaceous (All About Us Series, Book 3)

FaithWords (January 2, 2009)


Plus a Tiffany's Bracelet Giveaway! Go to Camy Tang's Blog and leave a comment on her FIRST Wild Card Tour for Be Strong and Curvaceous, and you will be placed into a drawing for a bracelet that looks similar to the picture below.




ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Shelley Adina is a world traveler and pop culture junkie with an incurable addiction to designer handbags. She knows the value of a relationship with a gracious God and loving Christian friends, and she's inviting today's teenage girls to join her in these refreshingly honest books about real life as a Christian teen--with a little extra glitz thrown in for fun! In between books, Adina loves traveling, listening to and making music, and watching all kinds of movies.

It's All About Us is Book One in the All About Us Series. Book Two, The Fruit of my Lipstick came out in August 2008. Book Three, Be Strong & Curvaceous, came out January 2, 2009. And Book Four, Who Made You a Princess?, comes out May 13, 2009.

Visit the author's website.


Product Details:

List Price: $ 9.99
Reading level: Young Adult
Paperback: 256 pages
Publisher: FaithWords (January 2, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0446177997
ISBN-13: 978-0446177993

AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


BE CAREFUL WHAT you wish for.

I used to think that was the dumbest saying ever. I mean, when you wish for something, by definition it’s wonderful, right? Like a new dress for a party. Or a roommate as cool as Gillian Chang or Lissa Mansfield. Or a guy noticing you after six months of being invisible. Before last term, of course I wanted those wishes to come true.

I should have been more careful.

Let me back up a little. My name is Carolina Isabella Aragon Velasquez . . . but that doesn’t fit on school admission forms, so when I started first grade, it got shortened up to Carolina Aragon—Carly to my friends. Up until I was a sophomore, I lived with my mother and father, my older sister Alana and little brother Antony in a huge house in Monte Sereno, just south of Silicon Valley. Papa’s company invented some kind of security software for stock exchanges, and he and everyone who worked for him got rich.

Then came Black Thursday and the stock market crash, and suddenly my mom was leaving him and going to live with her parents in Veracruz, Mexico, to be an artist and find herself. Alana finished college and moved to Austin, Texas, where we have lots of relatives. Antony, Papa, and I moved to a condo about the size of our old living room, and since Papa spends so much time on the road, where I’ve found myself since September is boarding school.

The spring term started in April, and as I got out of the limo Papa sends me back to Spencer Academy in every Sunday night—even though I’m perfectly capable of taking the train—I couldn’t help but feel a little bubble of optimism deep inside. Call me corny, but the news that Vanessa Talbot and Brett Loyola had broken up just before spring break had made the last ten days the happiest I’d had since my parents split up. Even flying to Veracruz, courtesy of Papa’s frequent flyer miles, and being introduced to my mother’s boyfriend hadn’t put a dent in it.

Ugh. Okay, I lied. So not going there.

Thinking about Brett now. Dark, romantic eyes. Curly dark hair, cut short because he’s the captain of the rowing team. Broad shoulders. Fabulous clothes he wears as if he doesn’t care where he got them.

Oh, yeah. Much better.

Lost in happy plans for how I’d finally get his attention (I was signing up to be a chem tutor first thing because, let’s face it, he needs me), I pushed open the door to my room and staggered in with my duffel bags.

My hands loosened and I dropped everything with a thud.

There were Vuitton suitcases all over the room. Enough for an entire family. In fact, the trunk was so big you could put a family in it—the kids, at least.

“Close the door, why don’t you?” said a bored British voice, with a barely noticeable roll on the r. A girl stepped out from behind the wardrobe door.

Red hair in an explosion of curls.

Fishnet stockings to here and glossy Louboutin ankle boots.

Blue eyes that grabbed you and made you wonder why she was so . . . not interested in whether you took another breath.

Ever.

How come no one had told me I was getting a roommate? And who could have prepared me for this, anyway?

“Who are you?”

“Mac,” she said, returning to the depths of the wardrobe. Most people would have said, “What’s your name?” back. She didn’t.

“I’m Carly.” Did I feel lame or what?

She looked around the door. “Pleasure. Looks like we’re to be roommates.” Then she went back to hanging things up.

There was no point in restating the obvious. I gathered my scattered brains and tried to remember what Mama had taught me that a good hostess was supposed to do. “Did someone show you where the dining room is? Supper is between five and six-thirty, and I usually—”

“Carrie. I expected my own room,” she said, as if I hadn’t been talking. “Whom do I speak to?”

“It’s Carly. And Ms. Tobin’s the dorm mistress for this floor.”

“Fine. What were you saying about tea?”

I took a breath and remembered that one of us was what my brother calls couth. As opposed to un. “You’re welcome to come with me and my friends if you want.”

Pop! went the latches on the trunk. She threw up the lid and looked at me over the top of it, her reddish eyebrows lifting in amusement.

“Thanks so much. But I’ll pass.”

Okay, even I have my limits. I picked up my duffel, dropped it on the end of my bed, and left her to it. Maybe by the time I got back from tea—er, supper—she’d have convinced Ms. Tobin to give her a room in another dorm.

The way things looked, this chica would probably demand the headmistress’s suite.

* * *

“What a mo guai nuer,” Gillian said over her tortellini and asparagus. “I can’t believe she snubbed you like that.”

“You of all people,” Lissa agreed, “who wouldn’t hurt someone’s feelings for anything.”

“I wanted to—if I could have come up with something scathing.” Lissa looked surprised, as if I’d shocked her. Well, I may not put my feelings out there for everyone to see, like Gillian does, but I’m still entitled to have them. “But you know how you freeze when you realize you’ve just been cut off at the knees?”

“What happened to your knees?” Jeremy Clay put his plate of linguine down and slid in next to Gillian. They traded a smile that made me feel sort of hollow inside—not the way I’d felt after Mac’s little setdown, but . . . like I was missing out on something. Like they had a secret and weren’t telling.

You know what? Feeling sorry for yourself is not the way to start off a term. I smiled at Jeremy. “Nothing. How was your break? Did you get up to New York the way you guys had planned?”

He glanced at Gillian. “Yeah, I did.”

Argh. Men. Never ask them a yes/no question. “And? Did you have fun? Shani said she had a blast after the initial shock.”

Gillian grinned at me. “That’s a nice way of saying that my grandmother scared the stilettos off her. At first. But then Nai-Nai realized Shani could eat anyone under the table, even my brothers, no matter what she put in front of her, so after that they were best friends.”

“My grandmother’s like that, too,” I said, nodding in sympathy. “She thinks I’m too thin, so she’s always making pots of mole and stuff. Little does she know.”

It’s a fact that I have way too much junk in my trunk. Part of the reason my focus is in history, with as many fashion design electives as I can get away with, is that when I make my own clothes, I can drape and cut to accentuate the positive and make people forget that big old negative following me around.

“You aren’t too thin or too fat.” Lissa is a perfect four. She’s also the most loyal friend in the world. “You’re just right. If I had your curves, I’d be a happy woman.”

Time to change the subject. The last thing I wanted to do was talk about my body in front of a guy, even if he belonged to someone else. “So, did you guys get to see Pride and Prejudice—The Musical? Shani said you were bribing someone to get tickets.”

“Close,” Gillian said. “My mom is on the orchestra’s board, so we got seats in the first circle. You’d have loved it. Costume heaven.”

“I would have.” I sighed. “Why did I have to go to Veracruz for spring break? How come I couldn’t have gone to New York, too?”

I hoped I sounded rhetorical. The truth was, there wasn’t any money for trips to New York to see the hottest musical on Broadway with my friends. Or for the clothes to wear once I got there—unless I made them myself.

“That’s it, then.” Gillian waved a grape tomato on the end of her fork. “Next break, you and Lissa are coming to see me. Not in the summer—no one in their right mind stays in the city in July. But at Christmas.”

“Maybe we’ll go to Veracruz,” Lissa suggested. “Or you guys can come to Santa Barbara and I’ll teach you to surf.”

“That sounds perfect,” I said. Either of Lissa’s options wouldn’t cost very much. New York, on the other hand, would. “I like warm places for my winter holidays.”

“Good point,” Gillian conceded. “So do I.”

“Notice how getting through the last term of junior year isn’t even on your radar?” Jeremy asked no one in particular. “It’s all about vacations with you guys.”

“Vacations are our reward,” Gillian informed him. “You have to have something to get you through finals.”

“Right, like you have to worry,” he scoffed, bumping shoulders with her in a chummy way.

“She does,” Lissa said. “She has to get me through finals.”

While everyone laughed, I got up and walked over to the dessert bar. Crème brulée, berry parfaits, and German chocolate cake. You know you’re depressed when even Dining Services’ crème brulée—which puts a dreamy look in the eyes of just about everyone who goes here—doesn’t get you excited.

I had to snap out of it. Thinking about all the things I didn’t have and all the things I couldn’t do would get me precisely nowhere. I had to focus on the good things.

My friends.

How lucky I was to have won the scholarship that got me into Spencer.

And how much luckier I was that in two terms, no one had figured out I was a scholarship kid. Okay, so Gillian is a scholarship kid, too, but her dad is the president of a multinational bank. She thinks it’s funny that he made her practice the piano so hard all those years, and that’s what finally got her away from him. Who is my father? No one. Just a hardworking guy. He was so proud of me when that acceptance letter came that I didn’t have the heart to tell him there was more to succeeding here than filling a minority quota and getting good grades.

Stop it. Just because you can’t flit off to New York to catch a show or order up the latest designs from Fashion Week doesn’t mean your life is trash. Get ahold of your sense of proportion.

I took a berry parfait—blueberries have lots of antioxidants—and turned back to the table just as the dining room doors opened. They seemed to pause in their arc, giving my new roommate plenty of time to stroll through before they practically genuflected closed behind her. She’d changed out of the fishnets into heels and a black sweater tossed over a simple leaf-green dress that absolutely screamed Paris—Rue Cambon, to be exact. Number 31, to be even more exact. Chanel Couture.

My knees nearly buckled with envy.

“Is that Carly’s roommate?” I heard Lissa ask.

Mac seemed completely unaware that everyone in the dining room was watching her as she floated across the floor like a runway model, collected a plate of Portobello mushroom ravioli and salad, and sat at the empty table next to the big window that faced out onto the quad.

Lissa was still gazing at her, puzzled. “I know I’ve seen her before.”

I hardly heard her.

Because not only had the redhead cut into line ahead of Vanessa Talbot, Dani Lavigne, and Emily Overton, she’d also invaded their prime real estate. No one sat at that table unless they’d sacrificed a freshman at midnight, or whatever it was that people had to do to be friends with them.

When Vanessa turned with her plate, I swear I could hear the collective intake of breath as her gaze locked on the stunning interloper sitting with her back to the window, calmly cutting her ravioli with the edge of her fork.

“Uh oh,” Gillian murmured. “Let the games begin.”



© 2008 by Shelley Adina.

Used by permission of the author and Hachette Book Group USA.

Being Kind

It is important to be kind to people. Today, I ran across a site who says that they are trying to get people to do just that. I am a little unclear as to what UnexpectedThankYou, LLC actually it. They have a contact page to ask for someone to come and speak, but why would I want him to? I don't know who he is.

The posts are good though. Some great thoughts to keep us motivated. Although, he could lose that awful snow fall that so many sites are using these days. It makes it so hard to read.

Fast and Cheap Internet

Do you get on the Internet? Obviously you do, or you would not be reading this. I've been paying $50/month (used to be $40) for my DSL. I love my DSL connection, but that is way too expensive. I can't get the lower speed connection (and lower price) that they offer, because I don't have a land line phone to connect it with.

Well, I just found out about Clear. They promote themselves as mobile internet providers, but they do offer home service as well. I'd love to get the mobile service, but home service is all I need and saving some money right now is super important.

I'm thinking I might sign up for their low end 768 Kbps/128 Kbps service. Not nearly as fast as what I'm used to, but for $20/month for the service and $4.99 per month for the hardware lease, that is half of what I am currently paying. When I can afford to upgrade, I will upgrade to their 6 Mbps/512 Kbps plan, which is still only $40/month for the service, still less than I currently pay with a faster download (and slower upload).

Their mobile plans are reasonable too. They have three plans, $30, $40 and $50. You can get a $10 monthly discount by signing a 2 year agreement. They are all 4 Mbps/384 Kbps, but differ in the bandwidth you get to use. The low plan gives you just 200 MB per month, the mid plan 2 GB and the big plan is unlimited.

The plan that I really want is one of their combo plans, the fast internet and the frequent mobile. That would get me connected at home and on the road, when I needed it, for just $40/month (with contract).

Before I signed up, I wanted to know how it worked. I didn't want to pay for the equipment, so would my current equipment work? Are their any other charges? Like with DSL, you pay the service provider and you pay the phone company.

Unfortunately, I will need to get the equipment from them. That is the $5 charge mentioned above. My equipment is not WiMAX compatible. Now what is WiMax? Basically they will be connecting to me via a cell tower. Cool, eh? With the home service, I don't think I can pack up my equipment and drag it along, I think it is just for the house, but it still comes via the tower. Their are no other charges though. Just the $25/month.

Hmmm... I've sometimes lost my cell connection here. What if I can't get good connection here? The guarantee I could not find on their site. That worried me, so I used their chat service to ask a representative. Here was the response: "If for some reason, the service doesn’t work you can cancel with a refund within 7 days." I wanted to make sure that was from when I hooked up service, not when I signed up for it. So I asked: "It is from the time you sign up with us." Too bad. That does not get much time to check out their service and make sure they are going to work well. Should be 30 days, imo. At least 14 days.

What about security, is it safe to do my banking over this connection? That was on the site. They claim it is very secure, using the OFDM Transmission protocol. Don't know what that means, so I looked it up. According to Wikipedia it means "Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing". After looking at that article, I still don't really understand, but it sounds secure. Hey, I might be a tech, but I don't know everything!

You want to sign up? Well, you might be out of luck. They are expanding, but currently only offered in Portland, Oregon. Normally our city is not one of those chosen to be beta testers like this, but I'm not complaining this time. They will soon be in Atlanta, Las Vegas and Grand Rapids, MI.

Basically, I decided to sign up, but I think I'm going to go to the kiosk I saw at Lloyd Center the last time we were there and talk to the people there. I hope I can get the equipment from them directly, so that I actually have 7 days to try it out and make sure I'm happy.

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Winter Wonderland: A SocialSpark Experiment

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A couple weeks ago I decided to try out a Spark on SocialSpark, not knowing what to expect. I suggested that people write about the winter storm that blanketed a lot of the US. They were supposed to link back to my girls in their winter wonderland. I was pleasantly surprised to have gotten 3 people take me up on the offer. I promised to give a blog back as my part of the deal, so here I am reviewing them.

First I will review Go Green Camping because they followed all the rules; include a link back to me and click the "take this opportunity button". The site is clean, the entry in question had some pretty pictures and it is all laid out nicely. Clean and pretty site. It did seem a little heavy on the advertisements and most of the posts were paid. You have to make an income, but it seems a little much to me.

Next we have RN2B who remembered the important part: the link back to me. But instead of clicking the "take this opp" link, she left me a comment. She let me know that she had done it, but I had to hunt down the post to see it. Still, I'm happy to see it. I like her site better than the last. It is also a clean site and despite my knowing she does paid posts (I met her on Social Spark and she has a small add for PayingPost) I don't see much evidence of her doing so. That means that she rights enough posts to hide the paid ones. I think this is the way to do it. I sometimes get a run on paid posts and have a few clustered, but I also try to have a lot of other quality posts, and a few fluff ones.

Finally, we have As It Stands, who forgot to include a link to me, but did take the opp properly. Nice blog entry. The site was clean enough, but the navigation was lacking. Could not find any information about the blogger or any way to contact him directly. The entries are well written and you can tell a lot about him be them.

Safe, Free, Fun Game for the Family; Action All Stars

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When I first came across ActionAllStars.com, I thought, by the name, that it was just a site for sports nuts. Not being a sports nut, I paid it no head. Then I was told that it was a game and that their kids loved it. I checked it out.

When I first started to play, I thought very little about it. It was ok, but nothing grand. I had trouble getting around, and didn't understand what I was supposed to do. Eventually, while walking around town, I ran into a place that said "play" so I did. Now I was having fun. Emma came over and wanted to play too.

The game we were playing was in the NBA arena, "Baller's Hall". In "Big League Bites" we had to prepare the food for people coming in. For playing these games, you get tokens that you can use to buy clothes or stuff for you "Home Turf". Together, Emma and I collected several hundred tokens and then went to buy some stuff. "Sorry, you need to upgrade to a Premium membership level to buy stuff at the store."

Premium membership is $5.95 per month. I realize that these places have to make money, but with all these games charging for their playing, you really have to pick just a couple to play and stick with them. That is, unless you have a lot more money than we do. I will not be paying the money for the game.

If is fun, but I don't think it is worth the cash to play it. Apparently most people agree, as there was no-one I could see, that had evidence of a premium account. When you get a premium account, you can move above rookie and you can buy stuff in the stores. There are probably some other places you can get to with a rookie account as well.

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Happy New Year

Just a quick post to say "HAPPY NEW YEAR". I pray yours is wonderful and blessed.

Lord, please bless all those that are reading this post and all those who have ever read any of my posts. May they have joy in their lives and feel love forever, amen.

Lost Genre Guild: Supporting Christian Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror

Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror and not often thought of as Christian genres. Does that mean that these genres cannot be used to support Christian values? I certainly hope not. If it does, then we miss out on an entire group of people who's reading preferences are not standard Christian fare.

It seems that I'm not the only one who feels that way. In 2006, Frank Creed thought that this lonely section of Christian fiction needed a boost. He gathered together other writer friends and together they build the Lost Genre Guild with the intent of supporting each other and increase their readership.

This site has some great resources. You can check out their entire catalog of books. You can read reviews of many books by the guilds authors. They also claim to have a mentoring forum for new writers, but the site always comes up with a 404 page not found.

The idea is great. Supporting each other and building up the genre are very worthy goal. The site though, needs a lot of work. There are several dead links, such as the mentoring forum, navigation is difficult, and it has a web 1.0 look and feel. One of these things alone would keep a lot of people from returning to the site, but when you have all three, it becomes difficult to keep users around.

I would recommend that Frank spend a little time (or money, to hire someone) and upgrade his site to some sort of Content Management System. There are many great (and free) ones out there. This would quickly take care of two of the problems. Navigation would be handled in the back end, so would not disappear when you move to other sections and it would update it to a dynamic web 2.0 look and feel. The dead links are a little harder, but there are some tools out there that will help to search the site for dead links.

I love the idea behind what is being done on the Lost Genre Guild, and I hope the site gets updated so that it can get and build a larger viewer base for its worthy authors.

This entry is part of a blog tour. See the entries below to read what other bloggers are saying about the Lost Genre Guild.