Wednesday, September 15, 2010

TWO YEARS OF SHINGLES

Yesterday on the eve of my second anniversary of the shingles affliction in and around my left eye, I walked up to my local drug store to discover a sign in the window offering the shingles vaccine. I was happy to see the vaccine, which was somewhat difficult to get only two years ago, now broadly available.
I said to the clerk at the counter where I was picking up a prescription, “I am a poster child for the shingles vaccine. I’ve have gone through two years of suffering with shingles.”
After two years with shingles, there is little to report other than to say that nothing much has changed: the itching, aching, unpleasant sensations including a feeling of swelling continue 24 hours a day at anywhere from a mild to a significantly-irritating level around my left eye including the eyelid, eyebrow, forehead and scalp.
When the feelings get really bad, I take Advil or Tylenol, which takes off the edge but doesn’t completely relieve the symptoms. I find that taking hot baths and applying hot compresses once or twice a day helps too.
For those with the continuing onslaught of shingles, I offer my sympathy. For anyone 60 or older who has thus far escaped this minor plague, I suggest getting the shingles vaccine, Zostavax. This is the only shingles vaccine available at the moment. The vaccine gives the recipient a 50-50 chance of escaping shingles. Based on my personal experience, I would say those are good odds.

A suggestion: My novel, THE PENCIL ARTIST is available as an e-book on Smashwords, Kindle, and Barnes and Noble; as a paperback on Amazon.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

BROWSING FOR FREE ENOVELS

In my relentless search for free novels in the past, I had an in-person browsing technique that provided me with some fabulous reading. I would pick a letter from A to Z, go to the fiction section of my local library (Half Hollow Hills Community Library), and go along the shelf with the authors’ names beginning with the chosen letter, say P for example.
I would read page 84 of the novels that looked interesting to determine if I should take the book home to continue reading.
The modern library with hundreds of thousands, or perhaps millions, of free novels available, just like the community libraries of old, lies within the confines of the world wide web.
The selection process can be the same or a variation on my approach. Some of the sites where you can find free or modestly-priced eBooks: Smashwords (www.smashwords.com), obooko (www.obooko.com), Jennifer Armstrong’s Free-online-novels (www.free-online-novels.com); Adam Decker’s onlinenovels.net; Online novels (online-novels.blogspot.com); and Wattpad (www.wattpad.com).

A suggestion: My novel, THE PENCIL ARTIST is available as an e-book on Smashwords, Kindle, and Barnes and Noble; as a paperback on Amazon.