Showing posts with label new first. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new first. Show all posts
Sunday, July 7, 2013
GSP's Book of the Day July 7
Knights of the Narrow Gauge is an account of each and every narrow gauge railroad that came and went from 1870 on in Colorado and surrounds. Twenty-one railroad lines, total. Meticulous, colorful, it’s about the innovative men who dreamed and built the impossible network. It acquaints us with the stouthearted Irish who operated the baby systems. It’s a one-source narrative, light, layman, non-academic narrative for train enthusiasts, who are plentiful and perennial. Racing across the plains, notching into mountainsides, the iron fingers of narrow gauge railroads flexed and slithered over alpine passes or poked holes through them and squeezed through the canyons of Colorado. Tough steel replaced rusting iron. The tracks of numerous three-foot wide railroads groped their way to new boomtowns in the Rockies. Freight trains and passenger trains, led by little iron ponies with peanut whistles, beckoned the pioneers to live beside them along the rivers and creeks.
http://www.amazon.com/Knights-Narrow-Gauge-ebook/dp/B00BR4A0D0
Labels:
alpine passes,
d b dakota,
db dakota,
first knight arrives,
infant railroad,
iron fingers,
iron ponies,
narrow gauge railroads,
new first,
new road,
peanut whistles,
san juan basin,
three-foot wide
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Book of the Day April 14
Knights of the Narrow Gauge by DB Dakota
Knights of the Narrow Gauge is an account of each and every narrow gauge railroad that came and went from 1870 on in Colorado and surrounds. Twenty-one railroad lines, total. Meticulous, colorful, it’s about the innovative men who dreamed and built the impossible network. It acquaints us with the stouthearted Irish who operated the baby systems. It’s a one-source narrative, light, layman, non-academic narrative for train enthusiasts, who are plentiful and perennial. Racing across the plains, notching into mountainsides, the iron fingers of narrow gauge railroads flexed and slithered over alpine passes or poked holes through them and squeezed through the canyons of Colorado. Tough steel replaced rusting iron. The tracks of numerous three-foot wide railroads groped their way to new boomtowns in the Rockies. Freight trains and passenger trains, led by little iron ponies with peanut whistles, beckoned the pioneers to live beside them along the rivers and creeks.
Word Count: 7500
Pages to Print: 33
Price: $2.99
Here's what we need you to do (Thanks in Advance!):
1. Login to Amazon
2. Click the link (under the picture)
3. By the title on Amazon there is a "like" button, click it.* if you wish you can stop there, but if you want to help even more . . .
4. When you click and hover over the like button it says "share this link: via Email, Facebook, Twitter or Pinterest." Click one (two or all) of them and hit share, it should only take a couple of minutes.
5. Page down to the visible tags* (Tags Customers Associate with This Product) and either click on the tags you agree with, agree with all the tags or, if you've read the book, add some tags of your own. The fastest way, of course is to click on the link that says "Agree with these tags?"
6. If you have read the book, please leave a brief review!
*Amazon, for some unknown reason, keeps dropping the like button and has seemingly permanently deleted product tags, so unless you care to leave a review, there is no longer any way to help us get the word out about this book on Amazon. We encourage you to buy it at Barnes and Noble, Smashwords, or on our Gypsy Shadow website (links provided below) and help our authors succeed, despite Amazon's bizarre treatment of authors and Indie publishers!
http://www.amazon.com/Knights-Narrow-Gauge-ebook/dp/B00BR4A0D0
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/knights-of-the-narrow-gauge-db-dakota/1114808214
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/293597
http://www.gypsyshadow.com/DBDakota.html#Knights
Labels:
alpine passes,
db dakota,
first knight arrives,
infant railroad,
iron fingers,
iron ponies,
narrow gauge railroads,
new first,
new road,
peanut whistles,
san juan basin,
three-foot wide
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