Keep buying at Amazon through neo-neocon!
I warned you you’d see this again.
It’s almost Thanksgiving. And that means that Christmas, Chanukah, and whatever other holiday might suit your fancy are all coming up much sooner than you think.
This post is to encourage you to feel their hot breaths on your neck and solve all your gift-giving dilemmas by turning to that online colossus, Amazon.
And if you use those widgets on my right sidebar to click through for all your Amazon purchases (now and at any other time of year) you will also be giving a small but still not insignificant gift to neo-neocon (it adds up, folks), and all without spending any extra money! What could be more wonderful?
This announcement will appear at my blog again a few times between now and Christmas, as a gentle yet mercenary reminder. And notice that Black Friday deals have already begun at Amazon, even prior to Thanksgiving and the actual Black Friday.
What’s more, you can get free shipping with a free trial of Amazon Prime for a month. Why not time it for the holidays?
Done! and I’ll try to keep this in mind. Thanks!
Always go thru your site ( or if I haven’t, and am browsing and decide to buy, I start over and go thru your website. Doesn’t cost me anything but a minute of time & helps you!
(by the way, I usually use your RSS feed as my browser homepage, but it doesn’t have the button thingy to go to Amazon. So when I am looking to buy, I have to go thru your regular neoneocon.com webpage to access Amazon so you get the commission. Hope it works! I’m a pretty good & pretty regular customer.)
I just bought a few books last week through your portal. I got Karl Denninger’s new book, “Leverage”, “But Didn’t We Have Fun?”, about baseball in the mid-19th century, and “Bottom of the 33rd”, about a 1981 minor league game. I stumbled on it by accident, and the reviews were great. That one will be a Christmas present for a friend. I don’t know if I’ll have time to read it myself before then.
I also got “The Rocket Men”, about the Soviet space program in the early 1960s, and Paul Johnson’s “The Birth of the Modern”, which was discussed here recently.