NEW Kindle Paperwhite (2021 Release)
$99.99
$149.99
33% off
Reference Price
Condition: New
Model: 16GB | Black
Screen Size: 6.8"
Top positive review
2,638 people found this helpful
A Book Believer Converted
By Cody Stephens on Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2023
I am someone who believes that there is something profound and special about a physical book. My favorite part about a book is its smell. It's not wrong to describe the smell of walking into a Barnes & Noble as pure euphoria. New books smell like potential, beginnings, and the possibility of something grand. Old books smell like legends, ancient wisdom, or forgotten secrets. Books have a weight to them as well. It's reassuring to know that this book you're holding is real — it takes up physical space in the world and this makes it undeniable. It's as if the power of the stories and ideas within are so strong that they have materialized into matter out of the aether. It's hard for me to hold, say, a Bible without a sense of reverence and awe. Even today when I walk into a large library I can't help but feel like I have walked into a holy place — a place of worship. Being surrounded by books has the same effect on me that a Xanex has on others. Books have an impact on me. I love them. This is why, when I started reading on a Kindle over a year ago, it felt like I was committing adultery. This nasty little plastic screen inspired none of the feelings that books gave me. It took the magic of books and sacrificed it on the altar of consumer electronics. Despite these feelings, I continued to use it. Now I have read a little over fifty books using my Kindle. I still believe that the Kindle kills the magic that physical books have, and it does. But for the first time in a year, I decided to pick up a book in paperback and read it. This experience of going back to real books has made me realize a few things about the Kindle and myself. First off, I realized with horror that I am addicted to my Kindle and its features. The people who designed the Kindle did so with intent. The Kindle's sole purpose is to read books — there are no other apps on it, there are no intrusive ads, and there is nothing to distract you from reading. Honestly, the device is relatively primitive compared to other consumer electronics, but that is a design choice and not a flaw. I would argue it is even easier to get lost in a book using the Kindle than it is with a physical book. And then there are the features — the glorious features. My favorite feature by far is the built-in dictionary. When reading a physical book and coming across a word I didn't know the meaning of, assuming I couldn't intuit the meaning from context, I would have to mark my place in the book, put it to the side, pull out my phone, and Google the word. This is tedious. It also breaks my train of thought and forces me to use my dreadful phone with all of its notifications and apps and stuff that sends me into a panic and introduces into my reading time the potential to sidetrack myself. I hate that. With my Kindle, all I have to do is touch the word and a popup with the definition appears and is dismissed just as easily, and then I'm off reading again — an interruption that is barely even noticed and my attention remains intact. Even better is the fact that my Kindle keeps a list of all these words that I've looked up over time, and I can review them anytime. I look at it occasionally and quiz myself — this is my idea of 'fun'. Now I'm a big fan of writing in my books — I underline, highlight, and write in the margins constantly. If I ever need inspiration or if I'm trying to remember something I've read, I will thumb through the book I found it in until I eventually find it. Sometimes when I get bored I will sit in front of my bookshelf and go through the books I've read looking at all the passages I highlighted to refresh my memory on all those inspiring things that I read in years past. It's a little tedious but not too bad. This habit of highlighting is not lost to me while reading on my Kindle. You simply press and drag your finger across the passage which will highlight it. But that's not the best part: Kindle will keep up with everything I have highlighted and organize it all for me by the book it was found in. So at any given time, I can see all of my highlights in any of the books I have read, and I can even share them to my Goodreads profile! This gets me visibly excited. The last feature I want to talk about is the backlit screen. If you do any of your reading in bed then you probably have a bedside lamp or a flashlight or some other novel light source designed for books. Maybe it's just me but I find it difficult to get comfortable in bed and read a paperback at the same time. Either my spouse is annoyed by the light while she is trying to sleep or I can't find the perfect position that makes it both comfortable and easy to read. The Kindle has a backlit screen with adjustable lighting and a "warm" light setting. This means all other light sources in the room can be extinguished and I can still get my reading done. No book-light required. The Kindle is so lightweight that I can lay or recline in any position comfortably. No more fighting with those books whose binding is stiff and unyielding. So now we come to the point of this post. A confession. It's a confession to myself and the world. As much as this pains me to say: The Kindle offers a far superior reading experience over books. I said it. I don't like it any more than you do, but it is simply true. The onboard dictionary, the highlights, the backlit screen, the insane battery life (I charge this thing once a month), all of it together creates the most consuming and productive reading experience available. I still feel subtle pangs of guilt when I look at my bookshelf. I don't think that will ever go away for anyone who truly loves books. But now my bookshelf has become a kind of "greatest hits" display. I still buy all the best books I read, and I now consider my bookshelf as a place of honor for all the greatest books. But I think of my Kindle as another appendage on my body — I never go anywhere without it. I love books. I love my Kindle. To my fellow book lovers out there who are still opposed to the idea of a Kindle, I say that you can love both. It will be okay. The Kindle isn't evil after all.
Top critical review
163 people found this helpful
Junk! Pure garbage!
By Jeannie on Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2024
Every new Kindle I bought has been a downgrade from the previous one and this one is no exception! The only reason I bought this one is I lost my previous one. 1. There are more menus, they are less intuitive, and are a nightmarish pain in the "neck" to navigate through. The Kindle designers need to learn the KISS principle; Keep It Simple, S... instead of adding all the extra bells and whistles, which have slowed this thing down dramatically! 2. Touchscreens and I do not get along. Something about my body chemistry makes them erratic to use at best. The old five button Kindle I had was extremely reliable and easy to use. The touch screen ones are a royal pain in the "neck"! The only reason I bought this abomination is I accidentally left my previous one at a restaurant and someone apparently stole it instead of turning it in. Even the previous Kindle, despite having a touch screen, was much easier to use than this magnificent mess. 3. I have over 2000 books and trying to get them onto this joke has been a nightmare. I had them all downloaded on my computer for side-loading but the ones I have already downloaded are not compatible with this new Kindle so the all hadto be downloaded again. Unfortunately, Amazon has made it impossible to side-load books anymore. Their content management webpage still has an option to download to a computer for side-loading but the downloads are an older file type that's not compatible with this thing so I'm forced to use WiFi to get books onto this junk. Even worse, the content webpage frequently shows some books being in the Kindle when they're not and some other books as not being on the Kindle when they actually are. It was a time consuming, royal pain in the "neck" to make sure the books actually were on the Kindle. At times, I would get an error message on the Kindle saying I couldn't access a book I put on it, saying I wasn't the original owner which was totally false! I would have to delete the download from the Kindle and reload it with the same book that supposedly i didn't originally own. With the obtuse, tedious way of getting books onto the Kindle and Amazon's royally messed up content website, I've probably lost a few books in the process. Thanks a lot, Amazon! I do not use WiFi—it's too easily hacked and, compared to side-loading, it's slow as a dead snail—but that's my only option for a mass download. Trying to get it to download my books has been a nightmare and is driving me insane! It's going to be a royal pain in the neck to remember to turn on the WiFi at home before buying a book. I've always used my computer to buy books; it's much easier than trying to do it on a Kindle with a tiny screen and unintuitive menus that also requires WiFi to be turned on. I just hope I can still buy my books that way because I do not wont to be making financial transactions over WiFi that's easy to hack no matter how well it's firewalled and how secure the password is. 4. On my previous Kindle, to sync it between it and my Kindle Cloud Reader (which I have to use when reading from my computer because Amazon is too cheap or ornery to create a Kindle for Linux App), all I had to do was get the location from one and type it into the other. Now I have to go through the rigmarole of turning on the WiFi, syncing it, then turning off the WiFi. Amazon needs to stop "fixing what ain't broke". 5. This Kindle is so "feature" bloated, it takes longer to do just about anything on it. After tapping on a book in the library, it takes seven to ten seconds for the book to open up. 6. The manual in this "feature" bloated abomination is over 170 pages long! It can't be downloaded to the Kindle; I have to read it directly over the WiFi (why on Earth didn't Amazon load it directly onto the Kindle?) ! If I ever need to refer to the menu when I'm someplace where WiFi, I'm out of luck. Another wonderful design, Amazon! Making it even worse, despite a detailed menu at the beginning of the guide, it can't be used to navigate directly to the part I want. I have to scroll page by page to get there, yet another pain in the "neck"! There is a scroll bar on the side but I never could get the stupid thing to work. There is supposed to be a version I can download but I can't find it. 7. Without a frame to make holding the Kindle easier, it's too easy to accidentally "tap" on something losing whatever was on the screen at the time. It's also too easy to accidentally press the on/off button. With Amazon being so obsessed with touch screens, why didn't they keep the on/off function screen onscreen like my previous Kindle did. Another great innovation, Amazon! Saying this "feature" bloated, unintuitive abomination is a disappointment would be like saying a Class 5 hurricane is a tropical breeze! Edit: I just now spent 20 minutes buying a book and fighting to get it onto this sorry piece of junk! I had to restart the stupid thing to get it to stop throwing error messages. Also, the sync feature is worthless; I’ve yet to get it to sync between this sorry piece of garbage and Kindle Cloud Reader.
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