Sujet : Re: TV news for Dec. 28, 2024, to Jan. 4, 2025
De : Nyssa (at) *nospam* LogicalInsight.net (Nyssa)
Groupes : rec.arts.tvDate : 05. Jan 2025, 21:10:29
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Logical Insight
Message-ID : <vleovs$16ide$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3
User-Agent : KNode/4.11.4
suzeeq wrote:
On 1/5/2025 7:56 AM, Nyssa wrote:
Robin Miller wrote:
<snip>
>
30+ TV Show Book Adaptations Arriving This Year So Far
(Dec. 31)
>
https://deadline.com/feature/tv-show-based-on-books-this-year-1236035246/
>
Thanks, Robin!
<more snip>
Nyssa, who is expecting a bout of bad weather here, so more
(e)books are
always good to have on hand while hibernating
Do you use Libby and Hoopla digital? With your local library card
you
can get access to thousands of ebooks. Libby is tied into my
state's
library system, so I can find books that my own library doesn't
have.
Between them and arcnive.org and its affiliate openlibrary.org I
can
usually find everything I want to read.
My main go-to for ebooks is libgen.is. lt's got a huge
database including history, tech, and science non-fiction
plus some older publications. I find enough of what
I'm looking for to keep my Kindles fat and happy.
Another site I check each moring is ebookhunter.net.
but just for category/suspnse, especially for new
releases. Most of what they have is romance and
historical fiction (romances set in the past) which
I don't care for at all, but I've found some new-to-me
authors in the suspense/thriller section that also
has cozy mysteries.
Most are in epub format, but Calibre fixes that
for Kindle consumption.
Give it a try; you might find that one book that
seems to have disappeared on other sources.
Nyssa, who is seeing the clouds of this cold/snow
front moving in as she types