Showing posts with label technology magazines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology magazines. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Horse Journal (1-year auto-renewal)

Horse JournalI work in the publishing industry and am always skeptical about bias towards advertisers in any publication. Horse Journal has completely removed that from the equation and offers wonderful, unbiased information that is helpful for any level of horse owner. I read it cover to cover each month. They give wonderful and explanatory product reviews and great articles about basic horse care from bedding to veterinary care. If you only receive 1 horse publication, this should be it!

This is one of the very best horse publications available today. It is a great resource for anyone with horses regardless of their disciple.

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I have been subscribing to The Horse Journal for over 4 years and have found the articles to be very informative. This magazine has no advertising and has something for every horseperson. You'll read the latest finding on a particular health issue, questions and answers to and from the vet, and a consumer report on a particular product. I save my issues as I have had to refer back to them when an issue arises at the barn. We had one horse suffering from severe rainrot. I was able to pull the past issue that dealt with this problem and show the owner. This magazine follows much of the AAEP findings you won't be sorry you subscribed.

Read Best Reviews of Horse Journal (1-year auto-renewal) Here

I like this Journal. It's informative and packed full of tried and true products. It's an equine consumer reports and I trust their reviews. In order to cut back on expenses I let all my equine magazines expire except my Horse Journal.

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Monthly reviews of various horse products with straight forward ratings and comments. Recent products included fly sprays, various supplements, etc. The articles offer pros and cons of each product, manufacturer info and the cost. Wish they had more pages because what is there is very helpful.

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Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Citydog Magazine

Citydog MagazineLots of variety in articles. Mostly articles and some helpful advertisements. Would recommend to any Puget Sound area dog owner!

I just picked up the premier issue of CityDog Magazine. I am so excited about it. After many years of perusing dog related magazines from North America and the U.K. I believe I can honestly say this is a wonderful magazine. That it is based in and about the Northwest and our LOVE for our canines is a big bonus. I highly recommend that all of the dog lovers in the area pick up a copy, better yet, buy a subscription!

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I have been subscribing to City Dog since it began and the magazine has only gotten better over the years. Excellent content on where to travel with your pooch, pet advice and all things doggie in WA, CA and OR.

Read Best Reviews of Citydog Magazine Here

This is a nice magazine with high quality articles and nice photos for all things dog in the Pacific North West, or those that wished they could enjoy such great areas as this for dogs. I live in San Diego but I still like this mag and will be renewing!

Want Citydog Magazine Discount?

Really nothing

Only adds and very cheap printing

I feel sorry that I have a subscription on that

I should buy food for homeless dogs!!

Thursday, October 23, 2014

Free Inquiry

Free InquiryFree Inquiry Magazine is published by the Council For Secular Humanism, whose stated goal is to educate and support "people who find meaning and value in life without looking to a god".

Given this, it is not surprising to say that the main focus of the magazine is on secular humanism issues and ideas. However, every issue has articles that really do apply to a much wider audience. They cover such general topics such as church-state separation, ethics and issues faced by any religious minority. I'm not surprised to find people referring to back issues for articles on various Supreme Court decisions or discrimination issues.

The magazine's editor is Paul Kurtz, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the State University of New York at Buffalo and founder of Prometheus Books. With this kind of influence, I have always found the articles to be well written and logical. They also run the gambit from complex philosophical treaties to humorous op-ed essays.

Produced by the Council for Secular Humanism, Free Inquiry's mission statement is "to promote and nurture the good life life guided by reason and science, freed from the dogmas of god and state, inspired by compassion for fellow humans, and driven by the ideals of human freedom, happiness, and understanding."

Common topics include secular humanism, atheism, church-state issues, and the rights of religious minorities. A sampling of articles from their most recent issue (February/March 2005) is illustrative of their objective; stories include "Fundamentalist Power in America" (by James A. Haught), "Crime and Causality: Do Killers Deserve to Die?" (Thomas W. Clark), "Law Reform, or DIY Suicide" (Peter Singer); and Jihad in the Netherlands (courtesy of the brilliant and ballsy Christopher Hitchens). They post some of each issue's offerings on their web site, so be sure to check it out.

However, it's well worth the price to spring for a subscription, freebies or not. The articles are consistently well-written and thought-provoking, the topical selection varied yet absorbing. I usually read each new issue cover-to-cover within a week of arrival in my mailbox. Nor do old issues grow stale; it's the kind of magazine you can return to time and again. Hubby and I still have copies from the early `90s that we peruse on occasion!

If you want scholarly yet understandable discourse, sound logic, and in-depth research, Free Inquiry is the magazine for you! It's an excellent change of pace from some of the fluff that passes for news nowadays. Another outstanding option is Skeptical Inquirer, from the Committee for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP). Skeptical Inquirer is quite similar to Free Inquiry (indeed, it's published by the same company and many of the contributors pull double duty), but with a narrower focus (it tends to focus on aliens, faith healers, miracles, and other "supernatural" nonsense).

Also, if you enjoy the magazine, you might also like their "Web Columns"; go to their web site for more details!

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FREE INQUIRY is published bimonthly by the Council for Secular Humanism. Sample article titles in the current issue (June/July 2004) are "The Religiosity of George W. Bush" and "From Regenerative Medicine to Human Design." Contributors include Christopher Hitchens, author and columnist, and Robert Price, a member of the Jesus Seminar. Other familiar names of secular humanists mentioned in the magazine are Edward O. Wilson, the late Sir Peter Ustinov, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. and Gore Vidal.

The tone of a few of the articles can occasionally be quite strident in the style of a fundamentalist preacher. In these rare instances FREE INQUIRY reads like a journal for a rigid nontheistic religion. Fortunately this does not happen too often.On the inside of the front cover is a list of twenty-one humanistic principles endorsed by the Council for Secular Humanism. I am definitely not a secular humanist but I do believe in reading alternative viewpoints especially when they address several of the most important issues of the day.

Read Best Reviews of Free Inquiry Here

"Free Inquiry" is published bi-monthly by the Council for Secular Humanism, a nonprofit group dedicated to ushering in a "new enlightenment," which is a worldview that's based on rationality, science and good old fashioned learning. They contend that one can live a good, "moral" life without religion or other superstitions, so if you're a regular churchgoin' person, this is definitely not the magazine for you. Then again, maybe this is precisely the magazine for you if you're the type of regular churchgoin' person who wants the laws of the country to conform to whatever you think your god of choice is telling you they should be this week. If the concept of seperation of church and state is highly problematic for you, then you definitely need to be reading "Free Inquiry" from cover to cover--one might even say religiously! For those of us who are already hellbound heathens, FI is that friend that comes in your mailbox to tell you that no, you are not alone. Unlike an actual church, one doesn't need to agree with all its teachings, and in fact a variety of opinions are welcome.

The mastermind behind the council is Paul Kurtz, professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Buffalo, and his vision informs the magazine as a whole. While you can tell he's no fan of Dubya, it would be a mistake to dismiss him, or FI, as hopelessly liberal. One of FI's regular, and most popular contributors, is Chrisopher Hitchens, the firebrand journalist who has taken on a far more libertarian bent of late. There's also longtime Village Voice columnist Nat Hentoff, whose political views are often frustratingly hard to decipher (he's strictly libertarian on free-speech issues, but he's also anti-choice and anti-euthanasia). Kurtz himself, while decrying the war in Iraq, can be described as somewhat conservative in his take on American culture. One recent FI editorial had him condemning current American pop culture as shallow, vulgar and wasteful (yes, Paul, and your point is...?). He even namechecked two films as evidence: "The Devil's Rejects" and "The Aristocrats" (two of my fave films of '05!) the latter being produced by Penn Jillette, one of the only true skeptics working in show business. Many regular FI readers of course strongly disagree with his tsk-tsking, and are not shy about telling him. So much for secular humanism being a "religion."

Of course, religion, or the merciless examination and debunking thereof, are the main focus of the magazine. Pretty much every December, readers can expect to find an article or two that focus a critical eye on the myths of Christmas and the contradictions contained in the Gospels. The continuing efforts of the Christian right to force creationism, or "intelligent design," into the nation's public schools has been covered quite thoroughly, with the anti-ID ruling in Dover receiving a cover story. Not wanting Muslim apostates to feel left out, FI also has Ibn Warraq (author of "Why I Am Not A Muslim") as a regular contributor. FI, it should be noted, was one of the few Ameerican publications to print any of the controversial cartoons of Mohammed that caused riots across the Muslim world. FI published just four of them, and even that was a source of disagreement among the magazine's staffers, some of whom felt it was disrepectful and unecessary to actually show the images. Compare this with the magazine published by American Atheists, which not only published all 12 of the cartoons, but also tacked on four REALLY offensive cartoons that even the Danish paper that commissioned them refused to run--heck, American Atheists even put one of the cartoons on it's flippin' cover! So while "Free Inquiry" is definitely no supporter of religious belief, they're also careful not to endorse ad hominem attacks, either.

In fact, the only real flaws I can find with FI is that it sometimes seems too academic for its own good. If they want to extend humanist thought and philosophy to the general public, they have to make greater effort to be more, well, populist. A greater sense of humor would help, too. Though regulars such as Hitchens, Wendy Kaminer and Natalie Angier are on the right track, many articles have the dry feel of a college symposium. If religion doesn't require you to have a degree in order to join in, then maybe the antidote shouldn't come across as a commandments from the top of an ivory tower. Oh, yeah, and subscribers can expect to regularly find donation requests in their mailbox, so keep that in mind. As long as the American theocracy lets you have a mind to keep.

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With religious fundamentalism on the rise, Free Inquiry is a breath of fresh air. Free Inquiry offers a secular viewpoint on the social issues of our time. Creation science, prayer in schools, euthanasia, abortion and reigious studies--all these issues and more are covered in this wonderful little mag.

Subscribe to Free Inquiry. I subscribe to several magazines and always look forward to getting this one the most.

Also recommended: How to Lose Your Faith in Divinity School

Friday, August 29, 2014

Reiki News Magazine

Reiki News MagazineAt any level of Reiki this magazine is one of the best tools. Eash issue has so many interesting and valuable articles.I look forward to every issue & consider it a must for all Reiki enthusiests.

If you are new to Reiki or an old pro this magazine is a great read! It has many ideas and techniques for using your Reiki energy and covers every subject imaginable on Reiki.

Don't miss the opportunity to improve your Reiki knowledge tenfold by subscribing to this treasure!

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The Reiki News Magazine provide comprehensive information for the practitioner. Articles are well written and easy to understand. I read my first issue cover-to-cover.

Even though this is a quarterly journal, I recieved the most recent copy instead of having to wait until the next publication date. It was a nice touch by the magazine!

I would recommend this publication to both new and experienced practitioners of Reiki.

Read Best Reviews of Reiki News Magazine Here

While I agree there are some very good articles, I find this magazine to be way too promotional with most of the promotions pointing to RAND products and classes. The overpromoting overshadows the articles. Not worth the money to me.

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This magazine has great articles, lets me know what's going on with Reiki and keeps me on track with my own practice.

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Archaeology

ArchaeologyIf you are not a professional archaeologist, but interested in archeology, this is the magazine for you. It covers all areas of archeology and is written in an interesting, but technically comprehensible manner. I look forward to each issue.

I love this magazine. I started subscribing to Archaeology back in college, when money was very tight and even eating out was a huge luxury. I still have all my old issues from college. Ah! To be 20 again! But it's nice to see that the quality of this magazine has never wavered.

It must be a delight to work there... can you imagine working for a magazine where you report on real subject matter, rather than the latest Octuplets, Quintuplets, or whatever drivel passes for news nowadays?

This magazine is a breath of fresh air, and I'm so happy when I get my hands on each subsequent issue.

Thank you for putting out something that I look forward to reading every single time.

Highly Recommended.

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I ordered this magazine subscription as a birthday present for my father. He is an armchair archaeologist and has thoroughly enjoyed reading this magazine. It has great world coverage of different events without being so academic as to bore the lay reader. The articles are thorough and interesting. I can't say that archaeology has interested me in the past, but I find myself looking forward to each magazine and read it cover to cover. I definitely recommend this magazine.

Read Best Reviews of Archaeology Here

If you read this mag regularly, you can get the subscription for $14.97 via those pesky little "SUBSCRIBE TODAY" cards that fall out of it endlessly... You can also subscribe to *two* years for $24.97, which is only a few dollars more than is being offered here for one year plus you avoid magazine subscription services such as this one that will bombard your from now until the end of time with their offers...

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I'm not an archaeologist. If I was born redundantly wealthy I think that I might have been one.

Archaeology is my "stop everything and read it on the day it arrives" magazine. I've been a subscriber for years. I read EVERY article. As a reader of archaeology and paleontology tomes, this magazine is the adjunct to my selections of books to read. My wife and I have planned vacations around Archaeology's articles. I've detoured business trips to take in a visit to several article sites.

During a cross country moving event 7 years ago, I let the subscription expire for lack of new address. Someone from Archaeology, not a telemarketer for sure, called me and said that I had been such a long term customer that they really wanted to know why I didn't renew ... was it something about the magazine quality? The voice on the other end was just so dang disappointed as she pleaded for feedback that it was stunning enough for me to remember 7 years later. The magazine must be read by a small but dedicated subscriber base and I think the magazine staff themselves makes the calls.

My only complaint is that it only prints every 2 months. If archaeology is among your interests, you would entertain your fancies with a subscription.

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Sunday, June 8, 2014

TV Guide Magazine Crosswords

TV Guide Magazine CrosswordsWhen I purchased this it said a one year subscription, but it didn't mention that it is only 6 issues. They only send one ever 2 months. Very disappointing.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

BBC Music

BBC MusicI have subscribed to the BBC Music Magazine almost since its beginning a decade ago. It was introduced to me as a way of both building a good classical CD collection and learning more about music at the same time. For one low price (less than the cost of an average classical CD, in fact), one gets both a quality recording (some original pieces, some re-issues of quality library recordings from the BBC archives).

Each month, BBC Music Magazine highlights the latest issues and reissues in the classical CD world, as well as branching out in folk, world, and more popular pieces. Reviews include the top selling CDs, notable new releases, orchestral works, opera, choral, chamber, instrumental, jazz, and musicals. These fall under the heading of the essential recordings and the best critics. The BBC, because of its long history of association with quality broadcasting on a global scale, has within its writing and critical nets the greatest from all over the world. Included among the reviews are the latest and greatest books on musical subjects, as well as a sampling and offering of web sites of interest. The section of reviews is always indexed, which is a nice and handy feature.

The section entitled 'The Guide' offers picks of the month including concerts and opera, radio and television highlights, and always a particular feature. Unfortunately for American readers, this is the listing for the UK -something to use when planning a trip, but less than useful for regular planning.

Some of my favourite issues have included personality profiles on violinist Anne-Sophie Mutter, mezzo Katarina Karnéus, and pianist Pierre-Laurent Aimard. A great deal of history and influence on the contemporary music scene is contained in articles such as Daring Diaghilev, which explores the influence of his great inspiration, and speculates on those who will come after; and The Bard's Challenge, which discusses the problems and opportunities in music of working with Shakespearean works.

Prized CDs have included an exclusive BBC Symphony Orchestra performance of the Mahler's Symphony No. 1, conducted by Manfred Honeck, a passionate, idealistic performance that has an exceptional freshness and clarity, which tells a heartfelt story that includes memorial tunes and funereal overtones as well as a survivor's rejoicing at the conclusion. This symphony provides the backbone of the BBC Proms, and is the flagship orchestra of the BBC. The issue prior, which included a major article on Katarina Karnéus, the Welsh mezzo-soprano, included the CD of her performance of Berlioz Les nuits d'été with the BBC Philharmonic, conducted by Vassily Sinaisky. The month prior, the accompanying CD was a collection of piano pieces performed by Paul Lewis, pianist with an extensive career of performances since his performance in the World Piano Competition in London in 1994, performing pieces from Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Liszt, and Schubert.

In addition to the regular monthly issues, BBC Music Magazine includes regular special editions, which have included in the past 'The Golden Age of Musicals', a look at Broadway, West End, and other musicals from the time of Vaudeville to the present, with major articles of Hart, Rodgers, and Hammerstein, Lerner and Lowe, Bernstein, and more; 'The Glory of Venice', particularly concentrating on the works of Gabrieli, Monteverdi and Vivaldi; and Schubert: His Life, His Work, His World, which explores the background, biography, influences and compositions of this important composer. This range of special editions shows the breadth of BBC Music Magazine as well as the depth they are willing to go to in development of important themes or composers.

This is a very high quality publication with the addition of excellent recordings at a bargain price. This is perhaps one of the best ways in which to build a classical CD collection at home, and I am pleased to continue my subscription.

Here's the magazine that is what Gramophone pretends to be -a magazine for serious (and not so serious) collectors of classical music that want extraordinary value for their money and don't want their time wasted. While Gramophone has moved into new territory in recent years -such as spending pages delineating download technology and recordings and explaining why music in places like Fort Worth, Texas is worth 6 pages of text and color photography -BBC Music Magazine has stayed true to the core interests of most classical music buyers and collectors.

Both magazines carry features on important musical developments; both carried features this year on the 150th anniversary of Edward Elgar. It's not what they both do that differentiates them, it's what they both do that's different. If you review any two issues of these magazines side-by-side you will notice a bunch of differences, all of which -in my opinion -make BBC Music Magazine the better one to buy. Here they are:

1. First, each magazine comes with a CD every month. Gramophone thinks, for some bizarre reason, that people want to listen to a talky interview between its editor and a performer and then settle for listening to a dozen or so 20-second bleeding chunks of mostly obscure recordings selected by its editor as recordings of the month. Meanwhile, BBC Music Magazine rewards subscriber with a CD that is either a single piece recorded in concert, a group of complete works recorded in concert, or, as in the most recent month (June 2007) a historic recording -Malcolm Sargent's 1956 concert recording of Elgar's Symphony No. 1, its first release on CD. I'll leave it to you to decide which of these options makes the most sense for collectors -a CD you can add to your collection and sell, trade, give away or play...or an interview comparable to listening to an announcer interview a professional athlete and some bleeding chunks half the duration you get at the average Amazon site.

2. Both magazine covers state with pride they review "120 CDs, DVDs & books" (BBC Music Magazine) and "160 CDs, DVDs, books and downloads" (Gramophone). A closer inspection shows nearly all BBC Music Magazine reviews are of recordings by major composers of famous and not so famous repertoire. Gramophone review CDs by major composers; they also fill their pages with reviews of CDs by people you never heard of. The current issue includes reviews by composers named Billone, Arhtur Benjamin, Arnell, FX Richter, Moondog (is that a composer?), Grange, McCabe, Alnaes, Jeffreys, Marsh, Tucapsky, and SS Wesley. Some of the collections they review feature even more obscure composers.

3. Gramophone dedicates up to a dozen pages per issue to reviews of equipment and offers at least a half-dozen pages per issue to columnists that ruminate on issues of little interest to American readers. These columnists often end up saying something in support of Gramophone magazine. That's not too self-serving, eh? Meanwhile, BBC Music Magazine dedicates a couple pages to reviews of equipment and has virtually no pages dedicated to opinion outside of its editor's column.

4. While Gramophone has been through two extensivee format changes in the past five years and is still something of a mishmash, BBC Music Magazine's presentation is clean, simple, presentable, easy to read, and contains about two-thirds the advertising pages as Gramophone. I know BBC Music thinks the latter area is a problem. To me, as a reader, it is a joy.

With BBC Music Magazine available and delivering an original CD every month not available anywhere else in the world, I wonder why anyone continues to subscribe to Gramophone. Both magazines are relatively expensive (sinlge issue cost is $8.75 for BBC Music Magazine and $8.95 for Gramophone) but you can get a trial subscription for a good price if you buy here, shop around, or watch your junk mail. I got a one-year subscription for $55 that way.

No American should cash in their value-added subscription to either Fanfare or American Record Guide to pick up either British publication. However, if you are in the market to expand your base of knowledge, it is clear to me the best alternative is to subscribe to BBC Music Magazine. Not every one of their monthly CDs is a keeper but they are all of some value. I throw away that CD I get from Gramophone every month, my testimony to its value. I'm going to do the same with it altogether when my current subscription ends.

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I would agree with the other reviews that place this magazine in high regard. However, there are some concerns I thought I should mention, especially when comparing this magazine to Gramophone.

First, I will agree that the cds provided by BBC are better. Gramophone doesn't provide full works on their CD. However, from my standpoint, there is value to the interviews that Gramophone includes. It's just annoying to hear a bunch of clips of works.

However, when it comes to content, I often find myself prefering Gramophone to BBC Magazine. I take personal exception to the implication in one of the other reviews dismissing Fort Worth in the music world, as I live only miles from there. Our conductor, Miguel Harth-Bedoya, maintains an active tour schedule that includes, among others, the Chicago and Cleveland Orchestras, both among the top in the country. They also regularly premiere new works by significant living composers, including Kevin Puts, who was their composer-in-residence two years ago and is now a professor of composition at the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, MD. Maybe his name isn't the most familiar today, but living composers are what keep music fresh.

The fact is, music is alive today because we don't stay with what is familiar, and I enjoy learning about performers and composers that are new to me. I think BBC sticks too close to the traditional, and also has too much of a British preference for the reporting of music. The aforementioned review cites their extensive coverage of Elgar. It should be no surprise that a British magazine puts far more coverage on the most notable British composer of the last 200 years than Gramophone. Reading this magazine threatens to put blinders on the reader, focusing too much on the old and British. There are only so many articles to be written about composers and performers that are already dead. Gramophone favors the living, breathing art of music in its coverage.

That being said, I do wish Gramophone didn't put quite so much stock into their massive review sections. If BBC talked about more living composers and performers, at least those that aren't British, I would give it my vote.

Read Best Reviews of BBC Music Here

BBC Music main competitio in Gramophone Mag. BBC Music gives you a decent new CD each month, which makes this a bargain.

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My father very much enjoys and is quite knowledgeable about classical music, so I was hoping to get it right, and this magazine seems to be an excellent one. I gave him the subscription along with two unopened back issues I found on ebay. It was a hit!

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Monday, March 3, 2014

Birds & Blooms

Birds & BloomsMy family has enjoyed this magazine for years. I agree that the solicitations for renewal are overkill and addressed this concern by having my mother's subscription sent to me. The beautiful photography is a joy for Mom now that dementia has limited her ability to read. Other magazines are often tossed in the trash, but Birds and Blooms is enjoyed by three generations until the pages are worn. It's great to have a magazine that focuses on something positive. Birds and Blooms is a feast for the eyes and a celebration of the beauty that surrounds us. It's as if an old friend has stopped in for a visit when Birds and Blooms arrives in the mail.

This is a great magazine for the amateur birder and gardener. It focuses on backyard birding and flowers, and has very informative articles. I also really enjoy the stories and tips shared by other readers. Just makes you feel good to read it! I've given this as a gift to my mother, sister and grandmother, and they all love it and continue to subscribe. I did not experience any problems with those subscriptions, however I did go direct thru the magazine itself.

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I love this mag because it has beautiful photography and great articles about my favorite creatures. It isn't ad heavy and is well written.

Read Best Reviews of Birds & Blooms Here

Just enough reading on birds and flowers to fit into my hectic schedule. ideas on attracting birds, gardens, and enjoying the outdoors, even if it is your own backyard!

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7 Issues per year, but ... "Birds & Blooms publishes one special issue per year that counts as 2 issues in your subscription." Wow, that's the kind of math and word redefinition that only a politician could love. I quoted that from the "Early Renewal/Free Year Notice" I received in the mail.

Very nice magazine, enjoyed by all, but I don't know why they have to lie about the subscription in all the big font, and only tell the truth in the teeny-weeny typeface at the bottom of the renewal notice. Just give us the facts, we can handle it.

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Saturday, December 28, 2013

Orlando Style Magazine

Orlando Style MagazineOrlando Style Magazine is by far the best publication in Orlando. It compares to major fashion and style magazines in the nation and we would say sometimes even leading them. Great articles and fantastic photography!

We love Orlando Style.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Cook's Country

Cook's CountryI started reading "Cook's Country"s predecessor, "Cook's Illustrated" by browsing through it in the grocery store line. I liked it so much I subscribed to it--a first for me, since I usually consider cooking a chore rather than a pleasure. I cook because I like to eat, and the take-out restaurants up where I live are crummy, fattening, and expensive. The editors of "Cook's Illustrated" explained everything, even down to the basics of chopping an onion, which is exactly what I needed.

Now these same editors have come up with what I think is an even more useful magazine in "Cook's Country," (six issues a year) as the recipes appear to be even simpler--I guess that's where the 'Country' in the title comes in, as the editors use words like 'homey' and 'family-style' in describing their new endeavor. Those two descriptors usually signal 'easy to make.' It also seems to me that this new magazine is in direct competition with its predecessor, "Cook's Illustrated." Personally, I'm going to drop my subscription to "Cook's Illustrated" and keep "Cook's Country." The only thing I don't like about it is its awkward size (12"x10") which will make it hard to file.

On the other hand, it lies open very nicely, so I won't have to hold it to the right page by propping tea kettles and pickle jars on it.

The recipes in the first issue include steak fries, zucchini bread, and making up your own Shake 'n Bake (!). The Departments are listed as: "Recipe Contest" (Picnic Salads); "Lost Recipes" (Monkey Bread); "Recipe Makeover" (Macaroni and Cheese); "Slow Cooking" (Boston Baked Beans); "Fun Food" (Marshmallow Desserts); "Dressing Up" (Split Chicken Breasts); "For Your Convenience" (Salad Bar Stir-Fry); "Easier Than You Think" (Blue-Ribbon Fudge); "Getting to Know" (Tomatoes); "On the Side" ('Doctored' Applesauce); "Food Shopping" (Salad Dressing); "Equipment Roundup" (Blenders).

I've been looking for a good macaroni and cheese recipe that doesn't pack as many calories as my current one (1,118 calories per serving!), so I'm definitely going to give the "Cook's Country" recipe a go. Supposedly a main-course serving of the reduced-fat version only contains 493 calories. That is a big difference for a little fussing around with extra ingredients (skim ricotta cheese).

However I think I'll give this month's 'Fun Food' a skip (Marshmallow confetti kebabs--ugh).

"Cook's Country" might not attract gourmet chefs to its pages, but it's just the type of 'cook by number' magazine I've been looking for.

P.S. I can vouch for the 'Shake and Bake' Pork Chop recipe and the Creamy Shells with Peas and Bacon recipe. Both are easy and yummy.

My mother-in-law discovered this magazine while she was visiting and showed it to me. Neither one of us subscribes to any cooking magazines though we both collect recipes like fiends. However, we have both decided to make this magazine one of two we will be subscribing to (the other being Penzey's ONE). the layout is friendly and easy to read, the articles are informative without being obnoxious, and the ratings categories are great (latest edition did chef's knives and lemonades). Also very helpful is the back cover it lists all the recipes and what page they are on, as well as showing some pictures. Great for when you're looking for a specific one and don't want to have to page through the magazine to find it! The recipes are such that an inexperienced cook would have no difficulty but an experienced cook would still enjoy preparing them. All-in-all, a great magazine!

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I agree entirely with "starmoth". I subscribed to Cooks Illustrated and although it was beautiful and interesting the recipes were just a little over the top for me. I really like the kind of comfort food approach in Country Cooking but I also find the size a little awkward. If you really like macaroni and cheese and stew you'll love this magazine.

jeremy

Read Best Reviews of Cook's Country Here

The few low reviewers about Cook's Country seem confused by this magazine's commitment to simple home cooking, and some of them have asked, "Why bother? Isn't that what Cook's Illustrated is all about?"

Well, yes and no. Cook's Illustrated, in my observation, is geared far more to the urban or East Coast food lover, someone with a spouse or partner but no, or grown, children, and someone who entertains (as in "has dinner parties") with some frequency. The recipes are indeed simple and turn out beautifully, but they're not exactly the sort of thing most families would tackle on a Tuesday night.

Cook's Country, on the other hand, seems to have as its demographic the home cook with a spouse and kids to feed, and whose parties run to the "child's birthday" or "backyard BBQ" or "family Thanksgiving" type occasions. It's just as accessible, interesting, and smart as Cook's Illustrated, but with a down-home, Midwest vibe. Think of CC as Vermont-dwelling CI's cousin from Topeka.

Ultimately, the buyer should decide based on lifestyle which magazine is more practical. If your cooking is geared toward dinners for two and cocktail parties (or if you plan on buying this as an aspirational exercise but don't intend to make any of the recipes) by all means, subscribe to Cook's Illustrated. But if you are looking for inspiration for delicious weeknight dinners and simple family celebrations while juggling Susie's oboe lessons and Billy's tae kwon do class, look no further than Cook's Country.

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I not only enjoy cooking and eating, I like reading about food, including a close perusal of every issue of _Cook's Illustrated._ And as a charter subscriber, I took advantage of their offer of a free copy of the premiere issue of this new sister publication. Even though I have considerable respect for Christopher Kimball's editorial abilities, I think he's made several serious errors this time. The idea is to give coverage to "country food," by which he appears to mean home-cooking. "It's not about fancy cooking or expensive restaurants or foods with names you can't pronounce." But isn't that exactly the philosophy behind _Cook's Illustrated?_ Every dish deconstructed and reinvented in the original magazine is also home-cooking. That's exactly why I enjoy it, why I end up trying at least half the recipes in each issue. Also like CI, this magazine analyzes in depth a relatively few recipes -the first issue includes pot roast, chocolate pudding, fried chicken, and green beans, among others -and follows the method of testing-to-destruction to discover which variations and options really are the best. There's also a "Mystery Tool" column and a kitchen-questions page and a couple of consumer advisory sections (this time it's the best bottled Italian salad dressing and the best slow cooker). The main differences are the inclusion of a section of tear-out recipe cards in the center of the magazine, à la _Family Circle,_ and an excessively cutesy-homespun design sense. Also a couple of pages of readers' kitchen memories, both good and bad. They also use color throughout the magazine, unlike Cook's Illustrated. So why publish this new title when most of the contents seem to be simply overflow from their flagship publication? And -perhaps the greatest error, in my opinion -someone decided this magazine should be published in a 10" by 12" format. It's much too tall to fit on the shelf with my copies of _Cook's Illustrated_ and _Gourmet_ and most of my cookbooks. I hate that.

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Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Log Home Living (1-year automatic renewal)

Log Home LivingI have seen the magazine before and I liked it so much. I love the houses and the decor, it is very nice. Designers are very profesional. I love the magazine!..Congratulations!

Here is a magazine about log cabins. Log Homes. The lifestyle many of us city dwellers dream of, and NOW we have our new magazine , I will have mine for 2 years.

ANd everytime I get it from my mailbox, the dreaming begins again. For Someday I may finally get my dream log home here in Northern Arizona. My Dream.

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If you own a log home this magazine gives you many great ideas. I ordered it for my brother and sister-in-law before they bought their home. At this time it gave them important features and qualities of a well constructed log home. Now that they have bought their new home it is not unusual for them to show me an idea they have seen in this magazine which they would like to change or add in their home. I ordered this for them last year and have reordered it again for this next year. It is definitely a must have if you own a log home or plan to buy one in the near future.

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STILL WAITING!!! Purchased it over a month ago and haven't gotten it yet. Is everything done by hand in these companies? Why is it taking so long??? Oh, well, I'll let you know when I know.

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Monday, September 9, 2013

Cottages & Bungalows

Cottages & BungalowsI love receiving this magazine! I read about it on a blog, and, decided to give it a try. It is worth the money! Highly recommend!

Have purchased this magazine as a single issue, waiting for my first subscription magazine to arrive and know I'll enjoy further issues...like keeping track of my subscriptions thrugh Amazon.

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I ordered this magazine in February and I have yet to receive it, therefore I can not review. I was charged for this order???

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Thursday, August 29, 2013

Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine (1-year)

Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazineThis magazine has paid for itself many times over with its very simple, relevant financial tips. I won't go into my personal details, but I estimate that by acting upon the advice I found in different articles over the past year, I will have saved and earned over $2000, and perhaps much more. This amount has not come from major windfalls from stock purchases, but rather from sound advice on taxes, credit cards, savings options, fee comparisons, etc.-the types of things we all deal with often. I have subscribed to many magazines over the years, and the majority were only for 1 year-this one I will continue renew for years to come!

I've read other personal finance magazines before and found them to be either too basic to be worth my time, or too focused on some obscure area. I'm not a financial professional, but I like to constantly increase my knowledge of personal finance. Kiplinger's has been great for that. I skip 80% of the articles in this magazine, but that still leaves one or two in every issue that teach me about an area I didn't know about -where to buy bonds online the most cheaply, how to find good financial advice, why options are priced the way they are. One good article pays for the entire annual subscription. Each issue has a wide range of articles appealing to lots of levels of experience.

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Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine fits right in the middle between the lowest-common denominator approach of Money magazine and the head-in-the-clouds attitude at Worth magazine. Kiplinger's has a nicely balanced style and tone; it never preaches, and I almost always find a tip, suggestion, or tax-saving idea that pays for my year's subscription in every single issue. If that's the measure of the value of a personal finance magazine, then Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine deserves a five-star rating. Good stuff, and a good value!

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I had been subscribing to Money magazine for the past 14 years. At some point I wanted a change so I try Kiplinger's. I'd say comparing between the two Money seems to target more on upper income readers whereas Kiplinger's middle to lower. Money's written style is more technical whereas Kiplinger's is less.

Overall I'd say Kiplinger's content seems more fundamental than Money.

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My retirement plan sends me a magazine, which is so boring that I don't even bother to open it anymore; Kiplinger's isn't at all like that. The best part of Kiplinger's is that it describes how real people with average salaries, kids, and debts can invest for the future. There are also some great articles for parents about how to teach their kids to manage their money. Everything seems practical, but I've yet to try any of it. The magazine is broken into four sections: `Ahead' short articles about finance news and current event, `investing' about investing mostly stocks, `your money' about ways to invest your money though not as technical as the investing section and more diverse, and `spending' which is basically general interest about new fun technologies and other ways to spend all the money saved or made through investing.

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