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Buying reading books on a budget - tips

Books are one of those things that have become a rather expensive luxury. I love reading and have noticed that it is becoming more and more popular again. But as with most things these days it is one of the first things normally cut out of the budget. So I thought I would share a couple of ideas how you can still enjoy a good book without spending the weeks grocery money.

Find a good second hand book shop. I have a bookshop I go to in Somerset West. I am the third generation to buy there the same lady that sold books to my grandfather, sells books to me now. I love the little shop. The sweet lady is in her seventies I would guess but looks still in her fifties and it is always an experience. She runs the shop with a passion for books and can tell you what authors are good and she is very good at picking books I would like. The best part of the shop is I can hand in my books I have read she sets it up that a person gets 'credited' with that and you can 'buy' books with it. I can buy a book there for under R10, which most of the time is almost falling apart or is very very old so old my mother could have read that very same book when she was my age.

Join or start a book club. This is something I have always wanted to do but I only read romance novels and sometimes Sci-phi so it's hard to find other people who would want to discuss it. It is rather a personal thin. The thing is though if you make a group of friends who all enjoy the same books as you, you can swap and change that way each can buy a book at approximately the same cost and swap it around as you finish.

Read books online. Online reading is my favorite choice. I especially like the sites where everyday people can write short stories. It is very exciting because it is most of the time unedited and truly fantasies. For example there was this one lady who is an nurse she wrote this wonderful period series story each week she would publish a next chapter it was wonderful. By the end of the story a publisher had contacted her and now she is working with them to get her book published.

Buy Books online. Online buying can be more cost affective only looking at the price but here is the catch postage. If you live in America or UK even Europe you do not have the same concern as here in lovely South Africa. I was talking to the bookstore lady asking her what she new about online buying, because I wanted to buy the whole series of my favorite authors books, she told me about a customer who bought books on Amazon and it was 'lost' in postage. She was not able to get a refund because it was not the sellers problem that it was lost here in South Africa's post offices. So you can take the risk but I would rather not too scared I would lose all my money.

Book sales or specials. I love book sales and specials. One of my favorite specials is where you can get a book with a magazine. What a bonus! Magazines for light hearted reading and a normally steamy romance novel attached. Not for 'serious' readers but for the lighthearted out there looking for some romance.

Join your local Library. A library card is a handy thing. I have two small children, I can show them the children's section and mommy can go find something nice to read and daddy can go online, everyone wins in this particular day trip and it is for free! That is a major money saver, not spending any. The only thing about Libraries is some do not have a good variety, especially if you want to read romance literature like me but give it a go as I said before it is free what do have to loose.

The original 16 December

December 18, 2008 by evl

I thought about the celebration of the original 16 december. What really made South Africa when the boers fought against the zulus. I found a really great article from Praag.co.uk This talks about 16 December 1838 and what happened on that great day
Today is a holiday in South Africa, the Day of the Covenant celebrating the Afrikaners' miraculous victory over the Zulu forces of Dingane during the Battle of Blood River on 16 December 1838. Whereas the new black-nationalist government of South Africa erased most holidays celebrated by white South Africans and was at one time even considering abolishing Christmas as being "Eurocentric", it has kept December 16, albeit under a new name, so-called "Reconcilition Day". In the Newspeak of the New South Africa, "reconciliation" normally means accepting black racial domination and aggression. For example, as part of ongoing attempts to obfuscate the horrific crime and racial violence that characterise South Africa today, various liberal and left-wing groups have advocated that white victims of black violence should get reconciled with their aggressors. A white female rape victim, for example, might pray together with her black male rapist in prison - if ever he did go to prison as most such crimes go unpunished in South Africa - and will foregive him so as to be reconciled with him. Within the sick mentality of our society, this type of travesty is seen as the new ethical ideal, often embraced by mainstream churches and religious leaders. The South African pathology of "reconciliation" derives from traditional African justice where the harmony of the tribe took precedence over individual rights. Even murder was easily forgiven after paying a few head of cattle to the victim's relatives, something which occurs to this day in South Africa, even in urban areas. However, whatever the TV news will say tonight about the many ways in which whites may prostrate and humiliate themselves as part of getting officially "reconciled", tens of thousands of white Afrikaners in towns and cities all over the country will be participating in a very different type of patriotic and religious ceremony. Like their forebears did 170 years ago on the eve of that great battle in which 450 whites defeated an army of at least 13 000 Zulus without any losses in their ranks, they will recite the famous oath: "My brothers and fellow citizens, here we stand in the presence of the Holy God, creator of heaven and earth, to make a vow unto Him, that if His protection shall be with us and He give our enemy into our hand so that we might be victorious over him, that this day and date every year shall be spent as a memorial and a day of thanksgiving, just as a Sabbath is spent and that we shall erect a temple to His honor wherever it will be pleasing to Him and that we shall also instruct our children that they must also share in it, as well as for our generations yet to come. Because the Honor of His name shall thereby be glorified and the glory and honor of the victory shall be given Him." South Africa's ANC regime has been trying to erase the Covenant and the Battle of Blood River from the history books in a way that reminds one of the constantly changing past in George Orwell's 1984. The hero of that book, Winston Smith, is employed in the Records department of the Ministry of Truth where the falsification of history is his official job. As Orwell puts it: "Day by day and almost minute by minute the past was brought up to date. In this way every prediction made by the Party could be shown by documentary evidence to have been correct, nor was any item of news, or any expression of opinion, which conflicted with the needs of the moment, ever allowed to remain on record. All history was a palimpsest, scraped clean and reinscribed exactly as often as was necessary." Despite the suppression of Afrikaner history in schools, as well as the changing of Afrikaner place names to eradicate all evidence of the founders of their towns and cities, the Day of the Covenant has remained like a glaring anomaly beyond the formidable reach of the Ministry of Truth. Not only do most Afrikaner leaders deliver a vast number of speeches on that day, but English-speaking whites are increasingly becoming intersted in joining the annual commemoration and are seeing great significance in the event. As one of them, Peter Hammond, has recently commented: "It is remarkable that, despite the treachery that the Boers had endured at the hands of the Zulu, and the massacres of so many unsuspecting women and children on the banks of the Blaauwkrans River, that no atrocities were committed by the Boers in retaliation. Instead, the Biblical injunction to love their enemies was fulfilled by the vigorous missionary work which was established by the Reformed Church in Zululand, establishing schools, hospitals, churches and orphanages, even within sight of where Piet Retief and his followers were so brutally murdered. In the century and a half since that original Day of the Covenant, many millions of Zulus have come to Christ and Zululand has been blessed by Revival. In a very real sense all of that began with the Covenant proposed by Sarel Cilliers, and enthusiastically adopted by the Wencommando." Today the Battle of Blood River has become an allegory of the impending struggle for survival to be fought by Western man on a global scale. In places like South Africa where whites are already a minority of less than ten percent it is a real physical struggle with members of the surrounding African horde attacking us at random every day. Not only have South African blacks benefited from quadrupling and even quintupling their population since 1950, but the ANC's open-border policy has allowed illegal immigrants from other African countries to stream across our borders, adding to the numbers already present. Elsewhere in the West, in North America and Europe, however, it is a moral and ideological fight that is no less intense. Whereas the strategic threats posed by China and a resurgent Islam are universally recognised by Western commentators, the leading role played by blacks from Africa in the moral assault on our civilisation is not. White guilt is after all not defined by the history of Western interaction with China or the Middle East, but by American slavery and European colonialism in Africa. Africans and their apologists are in the forefront of the accusation of "racism!" levelled not only at every white person somewhere in his or her lifetime, but more fundamentally at Western culture and history itself. Black radical thinkers from WEB Dubois onwards, through Frantz Fanon, Kwame Nkrumah, Malcolm X, Angela Davis, Thabo Mbeki and, I daresay, Barack Obama, have been unanimous in their condemnation of the West and its history as evil and rotten to the core. The Chinese and Middle-Easterners will no doubt stay at home. But the 800 million Africans who will rise to just under 2 billion in the next few decades, will descend on the ageing Western world like they are overwhelming the formerly European cities and towns of South Africa, appropriating everything in their path with the self-righteous violence that has become the African way. The United States, lest we forget, already has an African American as president. The election of Barack Obama was seen as a milestone in Africa's claim, based on her growing population numbers, to a greater share of world resources which will be provided by Europe and North America. While Mugabe is wrecking Zimbabwe, the US is pumping in aid money to keep the country's population alive, demonstrating that the inhabitants of Zimbabwe have as much of a claim on US resources as the American taxpayer. White demography is plummeting and we all know it. Among the many pronouncements of John Maynard Keynes, the famous economist, the following is the least quoted: "The great events of history are often due to secular changes in the growth of population and other fundamental economic causes, which, escaping by their gradual character the notice of contemporary observers, are attributed to the follies of statesmen or the fanaticism of atheists." Keynes ascribed both the First World War and the Russian Revolution to rapid population growth in Germany and Russia, respectively. Thermopylae and Poitiers are often seen as two critical battles that saved white, Western culture from extinction in their times. However, as a symbol of the shrinking global European population facing the barbarians at the gate, especially from Africa, Blood River has become far more apposite. In this dark hour when it seems that, apart from the corporate oil wars of the Bush administration, the West has lost its will to stand up for itself, we need to be reminded of the Gideon-like triumph of Andries Pretorius and his men over the Zulu army on 16 December 1838. Outnumbered thirty to one and armed only with antique muskets that took 30 to 40 seconds to reload, they fought bravely and won, against all odds. Only a superhuman effort of the same order could save us here in South Africa today from being driven from our land like the white Zimbabweans were from theirs. Very soon, our kin all over the Western world who are like sleeping babes before the impending peril will face the same predicament - of being a racial minority surrounded by a hostile and aggressive majority. The Day of the Covenant should be internationally celebrated among all those who believe that our Greco-Roman and Judaeo-Christian civilisation is still worth fighting for.

Do I have this wrong but Wikipedia is open source as in gpl and cant be sold

September 18, 2008 by evl

As far as I know the license under which Wikipedia articles are written is GPL and that means they may not sell it. So when selling the WIkipedia book or encyclopedia they are breaking the GPL license?

I guess I must have it wrong somewhere because they wont be that stupid to publish the book using the contributions of thousands of people that made their writings available under GPL.

So GPL writing may be printed and sold?

Long road in Colesberg, Karoo

July 28, 2008 by evl

This is part of the road trip series

This is right before we booked into the small but beautiful Karoo Hotel in Colesberg. What the name of that hotel is I still dont know.

There are amazing views of the sunset. Especially when you drive out into the fields. This is one of those sunsets.

With almost purple skies you cant imagine the Karoo being one of the driest places in South Africa. But the Karoo still remains one of the most beautiful places in South Africa.

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The road to Colesberg

July 28, 2008 by evl

This is part of the roadtrip series.

So driving at night is preferred even though many people say otherwise. If you are awake, drive. The road to Colesberg well that was not where we intended to go, actually we just drove, without plans, without direction hoping to find something interesting and wonderful.

As I was saying, we drove from Helderberg to the place where the plot is. Now on the pictures the lady did not tell us that its located just across the road from a squater camp. We had the idea that the plot was located in the middle of the Karoo, we had the idea it was a small town with a bunch of artists. And so we were wrong.

When we got to the town it was empty, it looked like a ghost town. No houses were standing up straight. It really looked desolated. The only life in the forgotten village was the smoke coming from the far reaches of the massive location.

And that was the end of our hopes to buy a plot there.

By that time it was around 9am. I have been driving 10 hours straight. Non stop, no sleep, no food, no comfort and I was starting to feel it. It was then we took the journey to Colesberg 250km from Bloemfontein. We got to a hotel there. I cant remember the name of the hotel but its really close to the petrol station on the left side of the n2.26june2008 008

Inside of the hotel in Colesberg.

 

Before booking into the hotel we went for a drive on a backroad in Colesberg. There are many gravel roads leading to mysterious places in South Africa. You really should take one of those roads some time. You will find amazing places and views. Especially if you are into photography. The best places to see in South Africa is off the road.

 

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The Northern Karoo or Groot Karoo as some know it.

Strand Beach is misty, Helderberg, South Africa

July 17, 2008 by evl

This is strand beach when its a bit misty. Almost at the end close to the pipe. The pipe the biggest surfing spot here in the Helderberg area. On a nice day in the summer you have to book your wave otherwise you float in queues for the next big one. Just joking, but in summer this place is crowded.

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Club Mykonos sunset at the harbour restaurant

June 13, 2008 by evl

Club Mykonos sits just outside Langebaan in the West Coast. Club Mykonos is the perfect getaway from the City life and busy work life. Being just 1 and 1/2 hours away from Cape Town by car its a quick escape from the outside world. Langebaan itself is a great place for a holiday. Club Mykonos used to be a holiday place in its entire but now people have actually bought some of the places and now live there. Club Mykonos is great all year around but especially in Summer times when its also the fullest time of the year. Booking in advance is a must for anyone that want to stay there for a weekend or a week. Club Mykonos also has some activities but most people just go gamble in the casinos inside Club Mykonos.

6 things to use your blog for

May 31, 2008 by evl

Cv You can use your blog to showcase your cv and when someone asks for your cv you can jsut send them a link. Or you can send them straight to the download link instead of having to email it for them and hope they get it. Journal You can use your website for a journal what most people do. They write their personal stuff in it and just blog about their personal lifes instead of having a book form journal. This is actually how some of the first blogs started. Photoblog You can use your website to upload all your photos for your familly and friends to view Portofolio If you are a designer you can use your website to display all your designs Contact place If you are a traveler who does not stay in one country longer than a week you might want to use a website as a place for everyone to contact you. Sort of like a homebase. Job You can blog full time. With all the opportunities online now days you can blog full time and make money and a living from working on your blog

Make it Happen - By Muhammad Karim

May 21, 2008 by evl

A three-word motto which helps me get things done: Make It Happen. I have it placed just below my monitor on a square piece of green paper with the three words written in red. These three little words always seem to push me forward on my quest to write, spread knowledge, help people, educate people, encourage creativity, and encourage movement. Whenever there's something to be done, no matter what it is, I just know one thing