Programming Windows 95 (Microsoft Programming Series)
Life's Little Instruction Book: 511 suggestions, observations, and reminders on how to live a happy and rewarding life
Life's Little Instruction Book; Volume II
Portable Life 101: 179 Essential Lessons from the N Y Times Bestseller Life 101 : Everything We Wish We Had Learned About Life in School-But Didn't
Chicken Soup for the Soul: 101 Stories to Open the Heart and Rekindle the Spirit (Chicken Soup for the Soul)
Chill Factor: A Novel
See How They Run
Pagan Babies
Out of Sight
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Maggie and I have experienced the advantages and the pitfalls of subscribing to magazines over the internet. A few times I’ve gotten really good deals that included about five or six magazines for cheaper than I’d have paid for one subscription. It encouraged me to try some that I ended up really liking and some others, well, not so much. Like Rolling Stone. I don’t know which offends me more about Rolling Stone magazine, their strong political views or the fact that they have strong political views.
I mean, when I subscribed to Rolling Stone, I expected a magazine about music. If they had book and movie reviews (which they do), then great, but primarily music. I definitely didn’t expect it to have so much political content. During this year’s 40th anniversary celebration, they’ve even dedicated whole issues to politics. And what a liberal rag it is! I guess I’m not surprised that a bunch of aging hippies would reminisce about the days of congregating on the Washington Mall, united, chanting slogans like “Make love, not war!” and “Ban the Bomb!” or tripping for days at week-long concerts where they knew they were making a difference, starting a revolution, and were never going to be like their parents. It’s just not what I paid to read from a music magazine.
Another I also subscribed to, fortunately, did talk about music. Unfortunately, it went out of print and my subscription had to be transferred to something else. That’s how I ended up with Entertainment Weekly, fortunately a very good magazine, an easy bathroom read. That’s also one of the negatives with ordering a bunch of magazine subscriptions at once online. Some of the offerings don’t last very long and the companies I’ve used don’t have very good customer service. I could never for certain know what was going on when a subscription would suddenly start or stop. Worse still, all the mail in our neighborhood gets spread around the block. It’s a regular occurrence to see the streets filled with people redelivering the mail about twenty minutes after the mail carrier has been through. I never know if a subscription has ended, been cancelled, or if it’s sitting at a neighbor’s house. I kid you not, one day two of my magazines were delivered to the fire station! Joe down the street said he’d drop them by but I never saw them.
It could be worse though. Maggie subscribed to People and it never even arrived. The subscriptions start in like 6-8 weeks, so it was months before she realized there was something wrong and called. It turned out that particular company didn’t offer People any more, so she had to transfer her subscription to another magazine. All she wanted was People and it was so expensive that she now has like a fourteen year subscription to something she didn’t even want. I wonder what she’ll get next when that magazine goes under in the next decade.
One magazine, Angels on Earth, came every two months and was a short subscription. It ended too soon and I would have renewed if I had known but it just stopped showing up without any kind of renewal option. Angels on Earth details stories from amateur contributors about how they feel blessed or thankful or connected to something bigger. I’ll have to find it online and subscribe again.
Heroic Stories is a lot like Angels on Earth. It, too, wants to “make the world a better place” through positive, uplifting stories, but it’s nonsectarian. Angels on Earth can be a little too religious or literal when it comes to angels. HeroicStories.com is inspiring in its simplicity. The stories they share often pertain to our every day lives and offer ways to make a difference without much effort. A recent story line and related discussion centered around the idea of keeping a few extra, cheap umbrellas in your car to give to a stranger in need. I know I’ve passed people in the pouring rain and felt like I wanted to help, but stopped short of offering a ride to a stranger in the middle of nowhere. With a little foresight and thanks to Heroic Stories, I can be ready to at least offer them some comfort.
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The Catcher in the Rye
by J. D. Salinger
Oh My God, Whatever, Etc. by
Ryan Adams on
Easy Tiger
Things You Say, But You Don’t Mean by Ryan Auffenberg on Climb
The Cost by
The Frames
The Reminder by
Feist
Let it Die by
Feist











