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Kindle Paperwhite E-reader (Previous generation – 2015 release) - Black, 6" High-Resolution Display (300 ppi) with Built-in Light, Wi-Fi, Ad-Supported
- Now available in black or white
- Higher resolution display (300 ppi) - with twice as many pixels
- Built-in adjustable light - read day and night
- No screen glare, even in bright sunlight, unlike tablets
- A single battery charge lasts weeks, not hours
- Massive selection, low prices - over a million titles $2.99 or less
- Prime members read free with unlimited access to over a thousand titles
Top Brand: Amazon
Highest resolution e-reader display
With twice as many pixels as the previous generation, Kindle Paperwhite has an improved high-resolution 300 ppi display for crisp, laser quality text.
No glare in bright sunlight
Unlike reflective tablet and smartphone screens, Kindle Paperwhite reads like paper.
Read comfortably with one hand
Lighter than a paperback, comfortably hold Kindle Paperwhite in one hand for those times when you can’t put the book down.
Charge monthly, not daily
Kindle Paperwhite won't leave you tethered to an outlet. A single charge can last up to six weeks (based on a half hour of reading per day with wireless turned off and the light setting at ten).
Won't tire your eyes in the dark
Kindle Paperwhite guides light toward the surface of the display with its built-in front light—unlike back-lit tablets that shine in your eyes—so you can read comfortably for hours without eyestrain. Adjust your screen's brightness for great reading in any light.
Next-generation reading experience
Kindle Paperwhite offers Bookerly, an exclusive font crafted from the ground up for reading on digital screens. Warm and contemporary, Bookerly is inspired by the artistry of the best fonts in modern print books, but is hand-crafted for great readability at any font size.
Typesetting engine lays out words just as the author intended for beautiful rendering of pages. With improved character spacing and the addition of hyphenation, justification, kerning, ligatures, and drop cap support, our best-in-class typography helps you read faster with less eyestrain.
Enjoy reading with larger font sizes without compromising your reading experience. Page layout and margins automatically adapt to work well at even the largest font sizes. The typography and layout improvements are available on over half a million books, including many best sellers, with thousands more being added every week.
Lose yourself in a book
By design, Kindle Paperwhite is purpose-built for reading and creates a sanctuary so you can lose yourself in a book. Unlike tablets and phones, Kindle doesn’t distract you with social media, emails, and text messages.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
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Reviews with images
No big improvement in the 2015 model
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on March 4, 2016I absolutely love this thing.
When I was younger, I used to read all the time. You could hardly find me without a book in front of my face. As I grew older and had less time I found myself consequentially reading less and less. Eventually I practically stopped reading altogether save for a book here or there when I got the itch.
Ever since I've had my Kindle I've been reading practically every day again. I read at the gym when I'm running or in-between sets. I read in the dark before bed with my girlfriend asleep beside me. I read during lunch. And of course this thing is always with me when I sit the porcelain throne (gross, I know).
The great thing about this that has enabled me to completely dive back into my love of reading is the convenience. It's thinner than pretty much any book and is very easy to take along wherever I go -- I can fit it into my back pocket if I want to. While being so small, you can pack an enormous library onto this thing, probably more books than you'd ever actually be able to read.
On top of all this, you no longer have to hold the book's pages open while you read -- something that always irritated me, particularly with paperbacks. It might sound insignificant but for me its HUGE. Probably my favorite 'feature'. I mean I could prop this thing up against a water bottle and read it while eating baby back ribs if I wanted to. I would only need to occasionally tap the screen to turn the page. Or in the case of reading between sets at the gym; I can easily set it down, hammer out a set and then pick up where I left off without ever touching a bookmark or worrying about laying it down the right way. Allows me to work on my pecs and my brain for maximum efficiency without annoyance, it's great.
Then of course there's the light. No more do you need to worry about the lighting in your environment or an annoying booklight. The light for this thing is excellent and adjustable. You can set it at a nice level for easy reading or make it bathe your eyeballs in light. Choose your own adventure.
And no it is NOTHING like reading from an iPad due to the e-ink. If I had to compare it to anything I'd say it's like a cross between an actual book page and a calculator screen. Except it's lit up and looks way better than a calculator screen.
Can't say enough good things, just buy one. And the people complaining about the slight off-white of the screen are being ridiculous. It has never bothered me at all.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 6, 2018When I found this Kindle on sale for Prime Day, I had already been considering getting a new eReader for a while. My old Nook from 2010 had a huge crack in the screen and was gradually getting slower and slower, and though I hadn't read anything in nearly two years due to work and personal commitments, I'm the kind of person that when I buy something, I make sure to use it. If I spend money on a new eReader, I'll make sure I didn't waste that money, which is exactly why I wanted to buy a new one - to get me back into reading.
After comparing prices and specs on pretty much every eReader option available, I settled on either the Kindle Paperwhite or another Nook GlowLight. To me, having a backlight is essential since I often read at night before bed or in situations where there isn't much light, like a nighttime car ride, and even in situations where the area is dimly lit, like in my living room while my wife knits, it can be hard to see a screen with no backlight. So after narrowing it down to those two options, it became a matter of price, and since Prime Day was just around the corner, I decided to hold off until then to see if there was a sale.
Boy, am I glad I did. The Kindle Paperwhite was $40 off, making it just around $80. And I couldn't be happier with my purchase.
Since getting it, I've loaded most of my eBook library onto it using Calibre, and I've read six books so far. The Kindle is just as easy and intuitive as my old Nook was, and runs so much faster! The screen is much more crisp and clear, and my new favorite feature is its Goodreads integration so I can share my progress and discuss books with my friends directly from my Kindle. All my books were in ePub format, so I had to convert them before I could put them on my Kindle, but Calibre made that extremely fast and easy, and I highly recommend Calibre to anyone using an eReader since it's a very powerful eBook library program that's totally free. After converting my ePub books to AZW3, I was impressed that there were no formatting errors, something which has been a problem with other file formats in the past (especially PDF for some reason).
The light on my Kindle is brighter than my Nook was, and I love the fact that it's always on. With the light off, there are many situations where the screen was readable but ugly and dim, but with my Kindle the light comes on automatically and makes the pages actually look paper-white (apt name, right?).
The only thing I don't like about it is the fact that I can't set custom screensaver images. On my Nook, I had the sleep screen rotating through the covers of some of my favorite books, which was a fantastic little detail that made it feel classy, whereas the Kindle shows "special offers" on the sleep screen which are never things I'm actually interested in. There's a way to pay to remove the special offers, but even after you pay, it still will only show generic Amazon screensavers and won't let me import custom images. To me, this is a ridiculous oversight, since it would be incredibly easy to just have a folder where the images are pulled from and let me put my own images in that folder to replace the generic ones. But really, that's a small gripe, and I knew about it before I bought my Kindle, and I bought it anyway because it was so much cheaper than the Nook.
Of course, my Nook vs. Kindle comparison should be taken with a grain of salt, since my Nook was so old and they've made newer models since then. But overall I'm liking my Kindle even better than my Nook, especially with the Goodreads integration. The Kindle's menu interface is very user-friendly as well.
On a side note, Kindle Unlimited - I'm not sure if it's worth it. I got a promotional 3-month subscription for $0.99, and there are a few good books on there (notably, the Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien, as well as the Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling), but the vast majority of Kindle Unlimited eligible books are self-published, and there are very few books by any authors whose names you'd recognize. When I first got Kindle Unlimited, I thought it was going to give me access to borrow ANY Kindle book, but it's really a small selection, and the names I searched for (Chuck Pahlaniuk, Stephen King, Ted Dekker, Isaac Asimov, etc) were nowhere to be found. So it's definitely worth the $0.99 for me to read the Harry Potter series and re-read the Lord of the Rings before I inevitably purchase the eBooks to own, I don't think I'll be renewing my subscription once the price goes back up.