101 Famous Quote from Alice in Wonderland

Monday, 27 February 2012

Making Money Online: Book Review of KaChing by Joel Comm


Click here to buy this book.

When I picked up this book two years ago, I was still an aspiring wana-be-online business owner.  Two years down the road, I finally started the engines for some serious blogging, to give my best level try on making money through blogging.

Joel Comm did a fantastic job on this book for those who are aspiring to use Internet marketing as a means of making a steady income or just as a sideline.  He has written his book in an easy to use manual with models he has used throughout his career in online business.

The book is divided into 8 chapters as follow:
Chapter 1:  The New Web Order - How the Internet Has Brought Opportunity to Everybody.
Chapter 2:  Your uniqueness Equals Cash
Chapter 3:  Content is not King - It is KaChing!
Chapter 4:  Information Products - Selling.
Chapter 5:  Earning from Affiliate Programs
Chapter 6:  Membership sites - Turning your Internet Business into a Passive Revenue Machine
Chapter 7:  Coaching Programs
Chapter 8:  Case Studies

Each chapter rules out the fundamentals of making your online business a success.  Joel Comm explains each fundamental in a simple and easy model which makes anyone capable of starting an online business.

His main model to create a great online business is listed out as below:
1.  You have a dream
2.  You have to believe
3.  You have to prepare
4.  You have to act
5.  You have to relate
6.  You have to use models
7.  You have to grow

Each of the fundamentals above were written with clear examples of how you could achieve them in a step by step method.  As a new blogger, I found his tips to be very practical.

However, I would like to stress that Joel Comm does not give solutions to online businesses but he offers invaluable advice and insights into what would make an online business successful.  His book is relatively easy to use and follow even when it comes to the more technical aspects of online business.

What I liked most about the book is the sincerity of the writer in which he stressed that starting a website is something everybody can do but to start making money from it would take a lot of preparation, hard work and determination.  Not many books like this would say such a thing accept for hyping you up to possibilities that cannot be achieved just to sell their ideas.

This is a great book for those who are just starting out as it points to all the right strategies and fundamentals that are needed to start on the right side of the trade.  It is also for those who are already seasoned Internet business owners as there are a few nuggets worth picking at to make your online business even better.

Sunday, 26 February 2012

Oranges are Not the Only Fruit - Jeanette Winterson


Click here to purchase book.

This is Jeanette Winterson's first novel, which speaks in every way a memoir as well as a delightful fiction that would delight any reader.

She used the different books of the bible to arrange the structure of her book.  Starting from Genesis and finishes in Ruth, she weaves her story in a sequence that would bring you from her childhood days to her adolescent years that were closely intertwined with rigorous bible learning and growing up with a mother whose dominance overshadows her father who is mainly quiet in the whole course of the novel.

Gender roles in the novel were very much turned around with Jeanette's mother being the head of the house and Jeanette deemed too manly to be a girl.  She was given roles to lead Bible study and preach in church.  There are only two male characters that are mentioned throughout the book; Jeanette's father and Pastor Spratt.

The story revolves around Jeanette's mother who is a fervent evangelist and an advocate for the Society of the Lost in their church.  Jeanette was constantly drilled on the Bible so that she can recite word by word during Bible quizzes in church and come up as the top of the class.

Jeanette's mother never believed in sending Jeanette to school, in which she calls it 'the breeding ground'.  She believes that all is lost in terms of spiritual guidance from God when one goes to school.  However, Jeanette welcomed it with an open enthusiasm and glee.  Jeanette goes on to terrorize the kids in school about how they would all eventually burn in Hell if they don't accept the Lord which brings her into a lot of trouble even though she believes that what she was saying was the truth and her way of trying to fit in.

As she grow into her adolescent years, Jeanette started realizing her hidden sexual attraction for the fairer sex.   She grew to love a new convert named Melanie and all turned topsy turvy when the church found out about their 'evil' relations.  Jeanette went through exorcism which aimed to rid her of her 'demons', where she experienced and orange demon that bids her to make a choice - either stay the same or change.  The writer clearly showed Jeanette's strong will and strong belief in God that helped her make her decision.  Jeanette eventually left home as she no longer is able to tolerate her mother who keeps cursing her as 'evil' and she worked in a funeral parlour, sold ice cream in a van and eventually moved out of town.  She eventually went home to visit her parents after some time away but nothing much has changed except for some extra electrical appliances in the old house.

This book is quite an inspiration for anyone whose searching for the inner truth within themselves.  It's a typical coming of age novel that not only inspires but also entertains.

Tuesday, 31 January 2012

Allah, Liberty and Love: Reconciliation of Faith and Freedom

If you are interested to read this book, you may purchase this book by clicking here.

I first got to know about Irshad Manji when I came to a curiousity to understand more about Islam.  I had this sudden fascination for the religion as I have been living in a moderate muslim society for the past 32 years and I realised that I hardly knew anything about it.  My lack of knowledge or newly found ignorance was not something that I would tolerate. 


Irshad Manji was a Canadian refugee that fled her hometown in Uganda during the Idi Amin's explusion of Asians.  Manji was born to parents of Egytian and Gujarati descent.  She and her family settled near Vancouver in 1972 and dictated her own learning of Islam via public libraries and Arabic tutors after being expelled from the madrasah.  She excelled in the secular environment to later on winning the Governer General's Medal for top humanities graduate, where she earned an honours degree in the history of ideas from the University of British Columbia.


She has also achieved many milestones in her career, from a legislative aide in the Canadian Parliament to managing and hosting a few talk shows in Canadian television.  In 2004, she wrote a book entitled "The Trouble with Islam Today", which won her not only accolades but also death threats.

Now with her new book, "Allah, Libery and Love", Manji looks forward to an optimistic fix and reconciliation methods from the Islam's woes in her first book mentioned above.

Her main idealogy comes from a term in the teachings of Islam called ijtihad, which simply means "a “tradition of dissenting, reasoning, and reinterpreting.”   According to Manji, the very essence of the Islam teachings have been stiffled by the Arab culture and moderate practice of Islam by Muslim moderates, which encourage violence and discrimination.  She encourages muslims and non muslims to challenge 'moderate' thinking that perpetuates intolerance and violence.

She also weaves her arguments around the need to obliterate the Arab culture in the teachings and practice of Islam.  Practices such as honour killings and wife beatings are just universally and morally wrong.  The practice of pack following in Islam is also something she shuns vehemently as it not only takes away one's individuality but also discourages the core essence of ijtihad, which she states is the core of Islamic teaching.

Personally, I feel the book is very engaging as she quoted emails written to her by foes and allies to make her point heard.  Some of the email conversations that she has chosen to included was cynical and hilarious in its own way due to her sarcastic wit and wisdom.  

A must read for those who have a curiousity for what Islam should be and feel that a change is imminent for the further proliferation of the faith.

If you are interested to read this book, you may purchase this book by clicking here.

           
          
  





Wednesday, 19 October 2011

My Reading Endeavour

I still remember the first time I got hooked on a book.  It was Enid Blyton's "Fairy Stories".  I clearly remember that the book was a birthday present for my eldest sister and I was only five then.  My sister was 17 by then and in her mindset, reading Enid Blyton was not for her age group.  She didn't bother much when I took her birthday present into the confines of my room and slowly peeled a page at a time to unfold all the mystical creatures of pixies, fairies, goblins and leprechauns.  I was hooked!

From that first book, everything else was history.  I went on to read one book after another and moved from fairy tales to biographies throughout my years as a kid to being a teenager.

Now, as an adult and an English Language Teacher in a predominantly mandarin speaking state of Johor, Malaysia, I hope to encourage budding readers or even, to give reading enthusiasts a place and venue in which we could come together to read and share our views about books and the love for reading.