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Showing posts with label Promotion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Promotion. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Back-To-Back Issues. Paperback Cover


Making It Up by Penelope Lively - RM 17.90

Review from: penelopelively.net

These elegant confabulations, as she calls them, allow Lively's talents full range, intelligent, limpidly well-written and full of human understanding, they evoke the times she has seen and the richness of other lives as well as her own. (Anne Chisholm, Sunday Telegraph)

Lively is one of our longest-standing and best-loved novelists, and rightly so, for she manages to sustain a true interest not only in the real life on which she gives us her fictional slant but also in the form of her own art. . MAKING IT UP is a truly novel book . . . . (Salley Vickers, The Times) 

This book is everybody's daydreams made real, and is a complete joy. (Heather Preen - Daily Express)



The Myth of You and Me by Leah Stewart - RM 15.90

Review from: Reading Group Guides

When Cameron was fifteen, Sonia was her best friend---no one could come between them. Now Cameron is a twenty-nine-year-old research assistant with no meaningful ties to anyone except her aging boss, noted historian Oliver Doucet.

When an unexpected letter arrives from Sonia ten years after the incident that ended their friendship, Cameron doesn't reply, despite Oliver's urging. But then he passes away, and Cameron discovers that he has left her with one final task: to track down Sonia and hand-deliver a mysterious package to her. Now without a job, a home, and a purpose, Cameron decides to honor his request, setting off on the road to find this stranger who was once her inseparable other half.
The Myth of You and Me, the story of Cameron and Sonia's friendship---as intense as any love affair---and its dramatic demise, captures the universal sense of loss and nostalgia that often lingers after the end of an important relationship. Searingly honest, beautiful, and full of fragile urgency, The Myth of You and Me is a celebration and portrait of a friendship that will appeal to anyone who still feels the absence of that first true friend.






The Dickinson Papers by Mark Ragg
 -  RM 17.90

Review from: Booklovers

A priceless exhibition of the papers of poet Emily Dickinson goes missing on arrival in Sydney. Jock, a lonely single father who loves poems, books and stories of all kinds, starts to follow the newspaper articles about the theft, and finds himself increasingly drawn to the mysterious and brilliant Lola, the curator of the exhibition. Both nursing wounded hearts and damaged lives, slowly they begin to reach out to each other through letters, emails and occasional encounters. When the police start receiving clues from the thief – marked on Sydney road maps – Jock find himself drawn into the hunt. But in a city with a story on every street corner, can he tell the hints from the red herrings in time to find the exhibition and win Lola’s heart?
A quirky and engaging novel, THE DICKINSON PAPERS is at once a modern love story, a tribute to a great poet and a love letter to the city of Sydney.




Gone With The Windsors by Laurie Graham - RM 17.90

Review from: Historical-Fiction

Written by a Wallis Simpson friend in diary format, Gone with the Windsors is not unlike the popular British series Bridget Jones’ Diary, except Maybell is a bit more old-fashioned and reserved than Miss Jones. The socialite’s life includes planning parties, shopping for the perfect outfit and trying to meet the elite and the royal. When the Baltimore girls, Wally and Maybell, find their way into HRH’s inner circle, things will never be the same.
Being unfamiliar with this particular time in British history, I did learn a lot about the customs and the pastimes of the various classes as well as the hierarchy of royal families. Fashion, food, furnishings and modes of travel are described in detail.
The main characters are given great quirks and personalities, but there are a lot of names to keep up with. Most of them are mentioned several times and so you’ll want to remember with who is who. As the story gets closer to the war it gets more interesting and less trivial. It’s fascinating how differently people viewed the situation.
I enjoyed this book and I would recommend it as a light, fun read, but as historical novels go it is not in my list of favorites.





Johnny Come Home by Jake Arnott - RM 15.90

Review from:

Ask any sensible person, especially someone who might be too young to remember, and all you'll hear about the 1970s is that they were crap: the ugly clothes, the unspeakable music and the general pointlessness of day-to-day life. The agreed opinion on the decade is so strong (and indeed has spawned numerous TV shows) that to dissent seems almost a revolutionary act. Jake Arnott's hypnotic, feverish and altogether wonderful Johnny Come Home - his first novel after the brilliant Long Firm trilogy - embraces the unfashionable idea that perhaps real passion simmered behind the platform shoes and glitter make-up; that beneath the enervating malaise was a vital, electrifying anger.
The year is 1972. The Stoke Newington Eight are on trial for bombs let off by the Angry Brigade. Stephen Pearson is a hippy involved on the fringes of the Brigade, but his problems are more personal. He lives in a squat with his lover O'Connell, and when O'Connell commits suicide, their lesbian housemate Nina worries about how Pearson will cope. Pearson - soft, impressionable, easily led - only had an identity in relation to his boyfriend. Where is there to go for a follower whose leader has died?
Pearson responds by unexpectedly asking glamorous, sparkly, attitude-filled rent boy Sweet Thing to live in the squat. Sweet Thing is an androgynous beauty, though he describes himself as "not bent, rent" and sees the world as a commodity. "I don't want to be free," he says when Pearson tries to explain gay liberation, "I want to be expensive."
Annoyed at first, Nina begins to see vulnerability in Sweet Thing and, despite herself, starts to worry about him. Sweet Thing is happy with the new arrangement, because it gives him a base from which to work with his most lucrative client, Johnny Chrome. Johnny is a mostly talentless glam rock star who has unexpectedly found himself with a hit single. Unable to cope with the sudden fame or deal with his hardbitten manager Joe, Johnny depends increasingly on drugs and the presence of Sweet Thing to get through the day.
Trouble looms in the form of Detective Sergeant Walker, a member of the Met's "hippy squad" who is charged with infiltrating groups like the Angry Brigade. What might he have known about O'Connell? And where exactly do his loyalties lie?
Events start to converge. While cleaning up O'Connell's room, Pearson finds an unexploded bomb. Nina, in a scene of marvellously understated gender swapping, sleeps with Sweet Thing. Johnny Chrome discovers that he can't go onstage, can't perform at all, unless Sweet Thing is with him. And Sweet Thing begins to wonder, dangerously, who he might be underneath the make-up. The road leads to tragedy, but Arnott doesn't take the expected avenues, and the ending manages to be both devastating and optimistic.



Minus Nine To One: The Diary Of an Honest Mum by Jools Oliver - RM 17.90

Review from: Infibeam

Being pregnant for the first time changed Jools Oliver's life. Having longed for children since before she can remember, she was suddenly faced with an array of unfamiliar, unexpected and sometimes downright embarrassing emotional and physical reactions. And when Poppy (and a year later Daisy) was born she had to learn a whole new set of skills. From trying to conceive and first positive pregnancy test to Poppy's first birthday, Minus Nine To One takes you through the worries, surprises, excitement, miracles and sheer bloody hard work that Jools and all new mums in their own different ways have to cope with along the way. As Jools writes, This certainly isn't meant to be read as a guidebook, or a medical reference book it is simply my story and I hope that you can relate to it in some way (and maybe even relax with it in the bath!). Down to earth, personal and very very funny, this is the book no aspiring mother will want to be without.



The Crimson Portrait by Jody Shields - RM 17.90

Review from: Reviews Of Books

The Crimson Portrait is set in an English country manor during World War I. Catherine is the owner of the house, but having lost her husband and means of support to the war, her house is converted to a hospital for soldiers who have suffered horrific facial disfigurement. All mirrors have been removed from the house so that the men can't see their own injuries. Pioneering new surgical techniques, Dr. McCleary and dental surgeon Dr. Kazanjian, try to reconstruct their faces. They're aided by an American artist, Anna, who draws the new facial masks for the men based on their photographs. Catherine, however, falls for one of the patients, and begins to wonder whether he might really be her husband. She uses subterfuge to get Anna to re-create the mask for the patient based on her husband's photograph. Jody Shields' novel has received positive reviews with the Seattle Times saying, "The Crimson Portrait has much in common with Fields' earlier novel, her promising debut, The Fig Eater. Both are set in the early part of the 20th century. Both are based loosely on real events. And both are rich, multilayered tales exploring the porous boundaries of science, art and faith."



The Firemaster's Mistress by Christie Dickason
- RM 17.90
Review from: Christie Dickason

The Firemaster's Mistress may tell the real truth behind the mysterious gunpowder Plot of 1605, although it set out only to slip imaginative speculation into the cracks in historical fact.

Francis Quoynt, fire master and explosives expert
is recently back from Flanders and dreaming of making fireworks, not war. Instead, he is blackmailed by the English Secretary of State, Robert Cecil, into spying for the government on the Gunpowder Plotters. The trouble is that Francis likes Robert Catesby and his co-plotters far more than he likes his employer. This work also makes him the enemy of the woman he loves, the Catholic glove-maker, Kate Peach. It also leads him inexorably into the heart of a plot far larger than anyone imagined, international in scale and threatening the survival of England itself.

Though The Firemaster's Mistress is an historical novel, modern readers will find the politics, threat of terrorism, and information spinning frighteningly familiar. 


Enjoy Reading... Adios!



Thursday, May 6, 2010

NEW IN TODAY!

I know we've all been waiting for these magazines to come. Yup, especially for the people of Jaya One.


Digital Camera Malaysia RM9.00 only!
If you are a subscriber from our store, you entitled a 5% discount for 3 months subscription and 10% discount for 5 months subscription.


National Geographic RM14.50
If you are a subscriber from our store, you entitled a 5% discount for 3 months subscription and 10% discount for 5 months subscription.



Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Second Hand Book Listing 3

All Books are priced RM5.00 only!


1. Small is Beautiful by E.F. Schumacher





2. Sun Zi's Art of  War by Sun Zi (sold)




3. Lords of the Rim by Sterling Seagrave







4. Harry Potter and he Philosopher's Stone by J.K.Rowling (Children's Ed.)






5. Who Moved my Cheese by Dr Spencer Johnson






6. Games People Play by Eric Berne (sold)







7. Gone With the Wind by Margaret Mitchell (sold)






8. All Things Wild and Wonderful by Kobie Kruger



Monday, May 3, 2010

MANGA COMICS SUBSCRIPTION

subscriptionMagazine


Hey there folks,

We are having magazines subscriptions exclusively for you, Daily Books customers. As you can see the above promotion ads, the titles of magazines that is in the subscription promo are listed above. Please do feel free to ask for assistance regarding this promotion here at the 'comment' box or you call me or you can simply go to our shop.

* PLUS, you will be entitled a 5% discount if you hand in your subscription from 3rd MAY 2010 till 12th MAY 2010.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Mother's Day Specials

Hey peeps,


Mother's Day is just around the corner. May 9th celebrated and our Mother's Day promotion will last a week from the day itself. For all Mother's Day books promotion, Daily Books is giving you a 20% of all purchases under the promotion title.


*This promotion is only applicable for magazines purchases above RM10.00 and online orders only. For more information on this promotion, please do not hesitate to call us.


Dear John (Paperback, Movie-Tie-In)
Nicholas Sparks
RM 34.90 
RM 27.90 (20%)



Dear John is Nicholas Sparks' latest novel. I've read all of Sparks' books and I have my favorites, such as The Notebook, and now Dear John is on my list of favorites too.
It's a touching story of young love that lasts a lifetime. The main character, John Tyree, first met the love of his life, Savannah Curtis, on the beach in North Carolina. At the time, John was home visiting his father while on a short leave from the military. Savannah, a college student, was in town with some of her peers working on a Habitat for Humanity project.
The two were an unlikely pair from the beginning. John was somewhat of a rebel who ran off right after high school to join the Army, while Savannah was a pure, hardworking, Southern girl. But, as they say, opposites attract. From the beginning, theirs was a powerful bond that unfortunately was always separated by time and distance. John had his obligations to his military duty and Savannah had her obligations to completing her education.
However, the two remained very committed to each other, despite their distance, until the unexpected events of September 11th changed everything, not only for the world, but also for this young couple's future.
A novel like this makes you wonder about all the people who pass through our lives and how often a single incident can change fate forever. It's a very endearing and heartwarming story about love and sacrifice. If you decide to check it out, my only recommendation is that you might want to have some tissue nearby!
Review by ezinearticles




Lavender Morning(Paperback)
Jude Deveraux
RM 35.50
RM 28.40 (20%)



"A fabulous family drama"

In Williamsburg, Virginia, the parents of Jocelyn "Joce" Minton come from different sides of the track. Her mom was the upper class elite debutante while her dad was a working class handyman. When Joce was five years old, her mom died. Her father remarried someone from his side of the tracks. Joce's maternal relatives cut her and her dad off due to his new family, which also include twin brats.
Joce fails to fit in with her new step-family, but finds her elderly neighbor Miss Edi Harcourt as an angel watching over her. When Miss Edi dies, Joce inherits her estate including an ancestral house in Edilean, Virginia. However, it is the 1941 letter that she finds that intrigues Joce. Though a bit hurt that her "grandma" Miss Edi hid her past, Joce arrives in town to investigate what happened to her beloved guardian angel during WWII. There she meets two hunks who are interested in her.
LAVENDER MORNING is a fabulous family drama filled with twists especially in involving Joce. The story line effortlessly rotates between WWII and modern times. Although too much coincidence occurs that move the inquiry too easily forward, fans will enjoy the optimistic contemporary romantic trip to Edilean and the bittersweet tragic events of the 1940s.




Crazy Heart (Paperback, Movie-Tie-In)
Thomas Cobb
RM 54.90
RM 43.90 (20%)



After a career that has spanned decades and five Academy Award nominations Jeff Bridges has finally got his hands on a Best Actor Oscar for his central performance as Bad Blake in Crazy Heart.
Jeff Bridges stars in this drama based on Thomas Cobb's first novel about an alcoholic country singer.
Bad Blake is a broken-down, hard-living country music singer who's had way too many marriages, far too many years on the road and one too many drinks way too many times.
The musician's career is going downhill as he watches his protege's star ascend, but his encounters with a Jean, a journalist that uncovers the man behind the musician, might just keep him from hitting rock bottom.
Jeff Bridges turns in a exceptional performance as Bad Blake, one the greatest central performances of the year, and it thoroughly deserving of the Oscar.
It's Bridges that really elevates the movie to more than it possibly would have been without him as he delivers a heartbreaking performance of a man who is clinging onto the success of the past.
Bad struggles with alcohol as he plays a string of low key gigs while his protege Tommy Steele is selling out arena.
Review by Female First.





The Secret Scripture (Paperback)
Sebastian Barry
RM 37.50
RM 30.00 (20%)

The Secret Scripture finds Roseanne McNulty nearing her 100th birthday and living in the mental hospital where she's been most of her adult life. She's secretly written her life's story surrounding her past in County Cligo, Ireland, and she shares it with Dr. Grene, who is preparing her for the hospital's closure. As Dr. Grene digs deeper into Roseanne's past, her worship of her father, and the reasons she was sent to the hospital, he discovers inconsistencies in her story. The local pastor in Cligo, Father Gaunt, has a different version of what really happened to Roseanne McNulty, but perhaps he has his own reasons for the differences. The Secret Scripture has received positive reviews with The Telegraph saying, "In Roseanne McNulty - sly, confused, defiant, passionate - Sebastian Barry has created one of the most memorable narrators in recent fiction."
Review by Review of Books.



Breaking The Rules (Paperback)
Barbara Taylor Bradford
RM 32.90
RM 26.30 (20%)

She is a top supermodel, one of the world's most beautiful women. Men love her. Women adore her. So why is someone trying to kill her? Barbara Taylor Bradford's latest blockbuster is the gripping story of courage and revenge, love and passion, treachery and triumph. Following a terrifying encounter in the quiet English countryside, a young woman flees to New York in search of a new life. Adopting the initial M as her name, and reinventing herself, she embarks on a journey that will lead her to the catwalks of Paris, where she becomes the muse and star model to France's iconic designer Jean-Louis Tremont. When M meets the charming and handsome actor Larry Vaughan in New York, they fall instantly in love and marry. Soon, they become the most desired couple on the International scene, appearing on the cover of celebrity magazines, adored by millions. With a successful career and a happy marriage, M believes she has truly put the demons of her past behind her. But M's fortunes are about to take another dramatic twist. A series of bizarre events turn out not to be accidents at all, but assaults on M and her family. The dark figure from M's past, a psychopath with deadly intent, has made a vow: to shatter M's world forever. But M also makes a vow: she will do everything to keep them all safe. When those you love are threatened and at risk, there's nothing you won't do to protect them... you'll even resort to breaking the rules! Moving from New York to the chic fashion capitals of London and Paris, to the exotic locations of Istanbul and Hong Kong, this new tale from a renowned storyteller is a genuine page-turner.



Say You're One of Them (Paperback, Oprah's Book Club)
Uwem Akpan
RM 59.90
RM 47.90 (20%)

Awe is the only appropriate response to Uwem Akpan's stunning debut, Say You're One of Them, a collection of five stories so ravishing and sad that I regret ever wasting superlatives on fiction that was merely very good.
The setting is Africa; the protagonists, children — smart, innocent, greedy, furious, witty — who are caught in the tragedies that have lately befallen the continent, from AIDS to genocide to the comparatively banal business of grinding poverty. Akpan, a Nigerian-born Jesuit priest, writes with precision and sympathy about people of different faiths and nations. His first tale, ''An Ex-mas Feast,'' delivers a gut punch from which the dazed reader never quite recovers. Eight-year-old narrator Jigana dreams of going to school while living on the streets of Nairobi with his family, including a shiftless, intermittently tender mother who sends him out begging and accepts handouts from her tough-minded daughter, a 12-year-old prostitute.
As the story begins, Jigana's family is intact, if barely, crammed inside their makeshift shanty, hoping for a lavish holiday meal. By the end, even this provisional community dissolves, a portrait in microcosm of the way a whole culture collapses. Hand-wringing journalists have described the misery of Africa's urban poor, but Akpan also captures the humor and fleeting grace that make the degradation infinitely more painful to read about. His youthful protagonists are not the waifs of UNICEF ads or the noble victims of guilt-ridden postcolonial lit. Unlike the unshakably high-minded Valentino Achak Deng of Dave Eggers' earnest quasi-real novel about Sudanese war orphans, What Is the What, Akpan's characters are ordinary, flawed, sometimes funny kids who happen to be caught in a nightmare.
You'll find no relief in the second tale, the masterful ''Fattening for Gabon,'' in which a brother and sister wait for their uncle to sell them into slavery. In one of the most disturbing scenes in recent fiction, he strips off his pants and tries to coach his young charges about sex — a skill they will presumably need in their new life. The hallucinatory ''My Parents' Bedroom'' dramatizes the ordeal of Monique, a pretty, pampered 9-year-old girl, as her home is destroyed over two bloody nights during Rwanda's civil war in the 1990s. ''When they ask you,'' her mother tells her, ''say you're one of them, OK?'' ''Who?'' asks Monique. ''Anybody,'' answers her mother. The book should be depressing, but the blazing humanity of the characters and the brilliance of Akpan's artistry make this one of the year's most exhilarating reads.
Review by EW.






Shanghai Girls: A Novel (Hard Cover)
Lisa See
RM 69.90
RM 55.90 (20%)

In 1937, Shanghai is the Paris of Asia, full of great wealth and glamour, home to millionaires and beggars, gangsters and gamblers, patriots and revolutionaries, artists and warlords. Twenty-one-year-old Pearl Chin and her younger sister May are having the time of their lives, thanks to the financial security and material comforts provided by their father’s prosperous rickshaw business. Though both wave off authority and traditions, they couldn’t be more different. Pearl is a Dragon sign, strong and stubborn, while May is a true Sheep, adorable and placid. Both are beautiful, modern, and living the carefree life ... until the day their father tells them that he has gambled away their wealth, and that in order to repay his debts he must sell the girls as wives to suitors who have traveled from Los Angeles to find Chinese brides.
As Japanese bombs fall on their beloved city, Pearl and May set out on the journey of a lifetime, one that will take them through the villages of south China, in and out of the clutch of brutal soldiers, and across the Pacific to the foreign shores of America. In Los Angeles, they begin a fresh chapter, trying to find love with their stranger husbands, brushing against the seduction of Hollywood, and striving to embrace American life, even as they fight against discrimination, brave Communist witch hunts, and find themselves hemmed in by Chinatown’s old ways and rules.
At its heart, Shanghai Girls is a story of sisters: Pearl and May are inseparable best friends, who share hopes, dreams, and a deep connection. But like sisters everywhere, they also harbor petty jealousies and rivalries. They love each other but they also know exactly where to drive the knife to hurt the other sister the most. Along the way there are terrible sacrifices, impossible choices and one devastating, life-changing secret, but through it all the two heroines of this astounding new novel by Lisa See hold fast to who they are.
Review by LisaSee.com






The Last Song (Paperback, Movie-Tie-In)
Nicholas Sparks
RM 34.90
RM 27.90 (20%)

In this wonderful story, seventeen-year-old Veronica (better known by her nickname Ronnie) Miller goes off to spend the summer with her dad in a small North Carolina beach town. She is reluctant for several reasons. Chiefly, it's because she has become estranged from her father over the past five years, ever since her parents underwent the proverbial messy divorce.
Ronnie has also been the typical big city girl. She's used to the high-fashions, private school, and nightlife of New York City, in meccas like Greenwich Village, SoHo, and the Upper West Side. Dropping her in a sleepy southern town seems apt punishment for Ronnie's recent episodes of angry rebellion. These included a run-in with the law for shoplifting, newly dyed jet-black hair with a screaming purple streak, and sporting Goth style fashions.
Review by romancefiction.suite101.



The Lovely Bone (Paperback, Movie-Tie-In)
Alice Sebold
RM 32.90
RM 26.30 (20%)

The Lovely Bones is Alice Sebold's debut novel, a remarkable story about love and family and letting go. Susie Salmon is 14 when she is raped and murdered by a neighbor, a serial killer of women who moves from town to town after each of his crimes. Susie's death sends her family into a tailspin as they each try to cope with the tragedy in their own way. Susie narrates the story from heaven, watching her friends, family, and the murderer move on with their lives. Alice Sebold does a wonderful job catching the rhythms and interactions of a family and community, and is surprising at times with the strength of her prose in a story about loss and finding the love that was never gone.The Lovely Bones is highly recommended.




The Time Traveler's Wife (Paperback, Movie-Tie-In)
Audrey Niffenegger
RM 32.90
RM 26.30 (20%)

This clever and inventive tale works on three levels: as an intriguing science fiction concept, a realistic character study and a touching love story. Henry De Tamble is a Chicago librarian with "Chrono Displacement" disorder; at random times, he suddenly disappears without warning and finds himself in the past or future, usually at a time or place of importance in his life. This leads to some wonderful paradoxes. From his point of view, he first met his wife, Clare, when he was 28 and she was 20. She ran up to him exclaiming that she'd known him all her life. He, however, had never seen her before. But when he reaches his 40s, already married to Clare, he suddenly finds himself time travelling to Clare's childhood and meeting her as a 6-year-old. The book alternates between Henry and Clare's points of view, and so does the narration. Reed ably expresses the longing of the one always left behind, the frustrations of their unusual lifestyle, and above all, her overriding love for Henry. Likewise, Burns evokes the fear of a man who never knows where or when he'll turn up, and his gratitude at having Clare, whose love is his anchor. The expressive, evocative performances of both actors convey the protagonists' intense relationship, their personal quirks and their reminiscences, making this a fascinating book.
Review by Squidoo.


Ok, that's all for now. Make sure you get your mum her favorite book. Happy Mother's Day folks!