Both Oxford and Indiana university presses are having their annual spring sales. Among other things, my own Claiming Sacred Ground is selling at Indiana for $12.
Also of possible interest to readers of this blog, at Indiana, are Jesper Hoffmeyer’s Signs of Meaning in the Universe, Foltz and Frodeman’s Rethinking Nature, and bunches of books by Peirce, Heidegger, and a posse of U.S. Continental philosophers (Sallis, Caputo, Lawlor, de Bestegui, et al.), as well as a good selection of cinema studies titles. The deals aren’t as good this year as they have been in past years, and unfortunately Peirce’s Essential Writings are not on sale this year; but John Sallis’s Topographies is a good deal.
Among the deals at Oxford are the following (note that the sale prices aren’t listed on the book pages, but go back to the sale page and you’ll find them – 50% or 65% off for all of those below): Hal Restivo’s Science, Technology & Society encyclopedia, Bill Edelglass’s and Jay Garfield’s excellent volume on Buddhist Philosophy, Jay Garfield’s highly regarded translation of Nagarjuna’s Mulamadhyamakakarika (The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way), Roger Gottlieb’s A Greener Faith, and David Orr’s The Nature of Design.
A good tip to use when thinking about downloading music is to
make sure you aren’t tying up your internet connection with other things.
Constant dialogue through these platforms is bound to not just positively influence your popularity but also generate greater sales.
Make sure you check on whether or not the music or
subscription service you’re paying for has
specific rules regarding DRM.