As part of the Smashwords Read an Ebook Week, the Irish History Compressed e-book is on offer at half the normal price. Click here to go to the download page.
But be quick! The week is almost over.
As part of the Smashwords Read an Ebook Week, the Irish History Compressed e-book is on offer at half the normal price. Click here to go to the download page.
But be quick! The week is almost over.
For a limited time you can get a 50% discount on our brief history of Ireland, using the following discount code: AY22T Click here to redeem it and download the e-book at once: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/311082 All the usual formats are available: Kindle,…
A comprehensive timeline can be found here: http://wp.me/P2M4um-5H
Irish History Compressed now has a Twitter feed under the rather squashed moniker of http://twitter.com/HistoryCompr (You’d think with over 500 million users the twelve-character limit on Twitter names would need to be lifted…) That means that from now on you…
All right, not everywhere, but on almost all electronic media – Apple ibookstore, Smashwords, Barnes & Noble’s Nook, Kobo, your computer, your smartphone etc. etc… To celebrate, here’s a coupon to get the ebook for a discount price at Smashwords.com:…
There’s been some controversy recently about ebooks protected by DRM (Digital Rights Management) and what that allows the retailer to do with an ebook you thought you owned.* It’s not very apparent unless you search quite hard on the Amazon…
In the tradition of Christmas sales we’ve reduced the price of the Irish History Compressed ebook[1] to £1.49 till the New Year. Apologies to those in other countries but the price is already at the lowest level Amazon will allow. “But…
I’ve just uploaded all the illustrations and pictures used in the short history of Ireland ebook to Pinterest. Between that, the free Kindle sample available on Amazon and the various extracts published here, I reckon a good third of the…
29th September 2012, the 100th anniversary of the signing of the Ulster Covenant: a significant date for launching a new blog and publishing venture on Irish and Northern Irish history (can one ever really separate the two?). Strictly speaking, today…