Sunday Salon: The Amazon Kindle Electronic Reader
Posted by Cottontimer on 27 Apr 2008 | Tagged as: Expat Life, Japan, London, Reading, Vietnam
My reading life is about to change.* I will soon be the owner of an Amazon Kindle electronic reader!
They came back in stock last week after having sold out in less than six hours after being released last December. When I learned that my sister would be coming to London on a business trip, I immediately ordered one for her to bring for me. Woohoo!!
I will be missing out on the wireless connectivity that’s available only in the U.S. but it’s much more important to me that I have access to books in a timely fashion. When we started our expat life in 1998, books in English weren’t always easy to find.
- In Taiwan, there was a decent selection at Eslite even though I was at the mercy of whatever was on the shelf.
- In Japan, Maruzen was ok but it was very expensive. A couple of years after we’d moved there, Amazon.co.jp launched and it was wonderful!!! (Yes, that deserved three exclamation points.)
- In Vietnam, very few English books could be found in the shops except for classics. Relatively new releases with Vietnam as the main subject were available but only as pirated versions on the street corner. Otherwise, the International Ladies in Vietnam library was actually pretty well stocked but in disarray. So once again at the mercy of whatever was on the shelf.
I’m not trying to make it sound like I was very deprived, though. We made frequent trips to Singapore where the selection of English books between Borders and Kinokuniya is quite good. My personal stash of not-yet-read books is also consistently worth several months if not a year of reading.
- Right now, we’re in London, UK which is, of course, fabulous for books but can still be quite pricey esp. compared to the U.S.
In contrast, Amazon Kindle books are $9.99 or less and available immediately for download.
Whether you prefer biographies, classics, investment guides, thrillers, or sci-fi, thousands of your favorite books are available. The Kindle Store offers more than 100 of 112 books currently found on the New York Times® Best Seller list and we’re adding more all the time. New York Times Best Sellers are $9.99, and you’ll find many books for less.
You spoiled lot in the U.S. will get to download sample chapters as well not to mention doing it all wirelessly (assuming you’re in the wireless coverage area). I, on the other hand, will be very satisfied with downloading my content via USB. Three features I’m really looking forward to are the built-in dictionary, search of all materials downloaded onto your Kindle, and clippings and notes which can be uploaded to the computer for other uses.
The first set of books I intend to download includes:
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Escape by Carolyn Jessop
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The Last Lecture by Randy Pausch
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The Fortune Cookie Chronicles by Jennifer 8. Lee (If you’re wondering why she has a number for her middle name, she added it herself when she was a teenager because “Jennifer” is too common.)
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Bringing Home the Birkin by Michael Tonello
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Pretty is What Changes by Jessica Queller
My books wishlist (started using delishlist in March) is, of course, much longer than this. Unfortunately, not all books are available for the Kindle. So while you may still find me at home with traditional paper books in hand, when out and about, I’ll most likely bring my Kindle.
What do you think of the Kindle and of eReaders in general? If you already have a Kindle, what books have you downloaded?
*Although hopefully not in the way of what’s been assumed about pregnant and post-partum women and their reading habits.
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I want one desperately! The major problem to this, though, is that I have hundreds of books on my TBR shelves. I don’t *need* a Kindle. I just want one.
Debra, Want is as good as need in my opinion. Mwahahaa.
I can’t wait to hear what you think of this when it arrives and you read your first book. I’ve been interested since it was first announced - the thought of being able to buy countless new books that take up no space is what interests me. Of course I have 100 real books to read but I could get through them and not have to buy any new ones.
The two concerns I have are:
1 what’s it like to read on screen instead of on paper
2 I think the books are still pricey - they aren’t that much cheaper than real paper books - especially since I tend to buy new releases in ASDA for £3.73 - I think that the fact they don’t have any printing costs should bring the costs of the books down considerably. i think I worked out you would have to read an awful lot of books to break even on the purchase price of the kindle itself. I might wait until the price drops some more - and then with the strength of the £ it might be worth it…
Mrs. S, I just noted today that WH Smith has mass paperbacks on sale for less than 4 pounds (was it 3.69?). The thing with Kindle is that it’s possible to get the latest releases for about 5 pounds when they would normally be available only in expensive hardcovers for at least twice the price if not more.
I think I probably would have waited to get the Kindle except that the timing was right - coming back in stock and my sister coming to visit from the U.S. For those of us overseas, we are missing out on a lot when we can’t get the wireless functionality.
The gadget freak in me has been giddy for days.
Will it need a salt cellar to hold it down on the table while I’m trying to read it? As an inveterate reader over meals this has to be a first consideration.
Ann, LOL!! I’ve read a few reviews where people mention how much easier it is to read the Kindle while eating! I think I still prefer to surf the Web while I eat. Much to the detriment of my computer keyboard….
Congratulations! Please tell us how you like it.
Thanks, Donna!! I love how you congratulated me whereas some of my friends looked at me with their eyes crossed when I gleefully mentioned ordering a Kindle.
I hate to admit this publicly, but my reading habits certainly changed in the way that was mentioned in that post. I also read parenting books, of course, but mostly the fiction is fluff. I don’t have much time to read and I can’t dedicate that much attention to it, generally.
Although, I was never one to read books like War and Peace, so maybe the fluff isn’t a new thing.
Abigail, I don’t know how much time I’ll have to read after #2 arrives. Hopefully because Stephen is a bit older and can entertain himself, I’ll still get my 1 book a month minimum in but I am afeared!!
[...] Following up on Sunday Salon member Maxine pointing to Susan Hill’s rant about a survey in the UK regarding women’s reading habits after having children, I went to my reading list to see what I was up to reading-wise in the year after giving birth to Stephen. [...]
I HAD wondered why she had a number instead of a letter for a middle initial. Thanks for saving me from a curiosity meltdown!
Sycorax Pine, I thought that 8 was a typo at first!
Having been an expat in Africa for eighteen years, I know exactly what you mean!
May I suggest you have a look at the Feedbooks site? They have excellent formatting (also for Kindle), include a lot of classics but some newer stuff for free as well, and are terrific about answering emailed questions and addressing any issues. My own YA fantasy novel Mortal Ghost is listed there.
Here’s the link:
http://www.feedbooks.com/
Thanks for the link, Lee! Congratulations on having a novel listed there.
I’ll be very interested to hear how you find reading with the Kindle. I’d love one, but with the rand/dollar exchange rate as it is, I think it’s going to remain wishful thinking for the time being….
Gill, Perhaps the price will come down by the end of the year! I don’t know how much books cost in S. Africa but you might want to do a quick calculation and see if you’d save any by downloading books rather than buying paper versions.
I have a Kindle (it came last Friday) and I love it.
The text search is a really handy feature; I find myself using it when the author refers to somebody and I can’t remember who they were and what their role was. Text search on their name, and up they pop–often the little snippet of text around the search term (each occurrence of the search term in the text gets about 3 lines in the results screen) is enough to remind me who the character was, and I can use the back button to get back to what I was reading. If not, I pick the occurrence that looks like it will tell me what I want to know, read that part of the book, and use the back button twice to go back to where I was.
I love being able to put little notes in the margins too.
I really enjoy the wireless access too, though; being able to look something up in Wikipedia or even Google for it–it’s like reading with a computer with broadband at my elbow. I’m sorry you won’t be able to use that feature.
What I think of Kindles and e-readers in general: I love e-books but don’t like DRM; I get many of my e-books DRM free if I can manage it. Feedbooks and manybooks.net have free public domain e-books compatible with Kindle, and I have a lot of those. Baen Webscriptions sells various science fiction and fantasy e-books without DRM and so does Fictionwise (but double check what you’re getting from Fictionwise–you need “Multiformat” ebooks; the DRMed Secure Mobipocket ebooks they sell won’t work with Kindle). That said, I still expect to buy some Kindle books from Amazon; I don’t want them to *regret* selling the Kindle, after all, and much of what they’ve got I can’t find elsewhere.
I have nothing against other e-book readers. I rather like the iLiad, in fact, but it was 1) too expensive 2) didn’t have a big enough selection of books to suit me and 3) uses WiFi, which isn’t easily available around here, rather than Whispernet, which is. On the plus side, iLiad reads PDFs (most scientific papers, for instance) and lets you write and draw by hand on its touch sensitive screen. But in the end I wanted the fiction books and the Whispernet access I could only get with the Kindle, and the iLiad costs nearly twice as much.
What Kindle books I have downloaded: many samples, like _Merle’s Door_, _Three Cups Of Tea_ , _The Future of Life_, _The Counter-Creationism Handbook_ and _Halting State_ for example. I downloaded a sample of _The Omnivore’s Dilemma_ and liked it so much I bought the book.
I’ve also downloaded a bunch of public domain books from the sites I mentioned above; my husband is fond of Edgar Rice Burroughs, for instance, so I downloaded all the Barsoom books and all the Tarzan books for him. I have _The Three Musketeers_ and _Pride and Prejudice_, all the free e-books Tor has been giving away to promote its new website, a lot of free e-books from the Baen Free Library, a subscription to _Baen’s Universe_ science fiction magazine, that kind of thing.
Fortunately e-books take no space and weigh nothing.
Wow. Thanks for the informative comment, Cat! When I was searching around for other users of the Kindle a few days, I cam across your LJ. It’s a small world.
Cat, I’ve been thinking about ordering a Kindle - or asking for one for my next birthday - so it’s great to read about your experience. Thanks.
Lee, Just do it!