Your Book Reviewer Vacations With The Kindle


This is the first of a three-part review series.  I’m going to be telling you about more than just a book.  I’m going to share my experiences with a Kindle eReader, a couple of books about karma and how they  impacted my recent vacation, business and my life.  So fasten your seat belts because your brain cells will be shifting during this read.

The Kindle 3 With Wi-Fi – Great for Casual Reading, Not So Great for Referencing

Since I’ve been doing a little more travel this year, I decided to take the plunge and purchase a Kindle.  I wasn’t sure if I’d like the Kindle or not, but I was committed to doing some reading on the plane and on the beach, so I picked up the Kindle 3 Wi-Fi version.

I love the physical action of reading, flipping through pages, taking notes in margins or on those first empty pages of the book, so I wasn’t quite sure how I would react to a Kindle reading experience.  But I was determined to give it a try because the mere thought of carrying three or four hardcover books with me didn’t seem appealing at all.

A Tour of Some Basic Features

Amazon’s Kindle made a brilliant first impression with me when my Kindle arrived literally ready to buy books.  If you purchase your Kindle from Amazon directly, you will receive a device that is personalized, registered and connected to your existing Amazon account.  This alone made me happy to have purchased this from Amazon instead of elsewhere. I’m sure it’s not hard to register and connect the Kindle, but Amazon understands that if you buy a Kindle, the first thing you want to do is download something and read it!  Way to show your customers some love, Amazon!

One of the great features of the Wi-Fi Kindle is its ability to click over to the Kindle store and purchase books with just the click of the button.  For an avid reader, this can get financially dangerous!

Amazon has always been known for its strong upsell — er, recommendation features, and the Kindle 3 does a wonderful job of that.  When I finished reading my first book, the Kindle gave me a list of books by the same author that I might like, as well as books on similar subjects.

Another feature I love is the ability to email and convert PDF files into a Kindle format.  Amazon will give you a unique email address.  Then whenever you want to convert a document to the Kindle, just email the document as an attachment with the words “convert” in the subject line.  And magically, within a few minutes, your book, document or report is now on your Kindle ready to read.

I was hoping to receive my review copies of books on the Kindle and save some trees, but I’m not so sure if that’s a good idea.  Overall, I have to say that I very much missed the ability to ruffle through pages and quickly go forward and backward within a book.  There is a “clipping” feature that will allow you to highlight and save clips and notes for the book you’re reading.  I used that a little bit, but it didn’t compare to the physical act of dog-earing the page for future reference.  The Kindle is designed to “get you lost in the book” (that’s a quote from Kindle).  I love how they turned what was a negative for me into a positive for someone else.

I did love the fact that I had every bit of reading material I could want available in a very portable and thin package and that I was able to purchase books on the fly.  For portable casual reading, I was satisfied.  For the purposes of reviewing books and keeping track of pages and quotes, I wasn’t.

Books, Singles and Guilty Pleasures All in One Place

And now, for the book choosing portion of my vacation.  Armed with a Kindle and a Wi-Fi connection, I was ready to start purchasing, unencumbered by the bulk and weight of physical books.  The possibilities were endless!  Since I was going on vacation, I decided to choose books that would inspire me and give me food for thought, not just action items and practical how-to’s.

With the Kindle 3, you can also listen to audiobooks and MP3 files.  So I decided to grab Malcolm Gladwell’s book Outliers using the Audible application.

Of course, the Kindle has an easy and direct way to buy all kinds of reading material from the ridiculous to the sublime and at price points that even make a book addict like me smile.   My current addiction is to the $.99 Kindle Singles – these are stories and articles at various lengths (some are practically novellas) and about a broad range of topics.  Be careful; it’s easy to get hooked.   I mean how can you say no to a $.99 extended reading and entertainment experience?  I haven’t been able to.

For example, I downloaded “The Happiness Manifesto: How Nations and People Can Nurture Well-Being” by Nic Marks.  This was a fascinating article about measuring economic growth and happiness and how to get a measurement that encompasses both accurately.  As my guilty pleasure, I also downloaded several Kindle Singles by John Locke, an author who writes hysterical stories with a recurring character named Donovan Creed, an assassin and generally smooth-talking, wild and crazy guy.

And for the book reviews you’ll be reading in the next two parts, I chose The Diamond Cutter, a recommendation from a fellow entrepreneur and business book addict, written by Michael Roach, a fully ordained monk in the Tibetan Buddhist tradition who decided to put the text of the Buddhist book The Diamond Cutter to the test as an executive for Andin Diamonds in New York.  Now that ought to be an interesting read!

When I finished The Diamond Cutter, the Kindle gave me a list of other books by Michael Roach. I chose Karmic Management because it looked like it would be an applied perspective of the principles covered in The Diamond Cutter. The review for Karmic Management will be covered in part two of this review.

As for the Kindle?  It has a permanent home on my nightstand and allows me to instantly switch from a business book to a Kindle Single or guilty pleasure.  I’ve started carrying it in my briefcase.

Do you own a Kindle or Nook or read books with your iPad?  What’s been your experience, and what are your device’s favorite features and why?

15 Comments ▼

Ivana Taylor Ivana Taylor is the Book Editor for Small Business Trends. She is responsible for directing the site’s book review program and manages the team of professional book reviewers. She also spearheads the annual Small Business Book Awards. Ivana publishes DIYMarketers, where she shares daily do-it-yourself marketing tips, and is co-author of "Excel for Marketing Managers."

15 Reactions
  1. I have an iPad that I bought exclusively for book reading ( totally wishful thinking, by the way ) and my partner has a Kindle. I love how light the Kindle feels compared to my iPad, and the fact that you won’t get distracted by other things – like I do while using my iPad.
    Before I switched from paper books to the iPad I also used to think I would miss how great it was to flip through pages, add a cute bookmark to remember where I was, etc…well, I don’t miss those things a bit!
    Can’t wait to read your book reviews!

  2. Great article, thanks! I’ve been looking at different blogs as I am currently deciding whether to take the Kindle plunge. I’ve found your take on the Kindle really helpful and straightforward, especially the part about the advantages of ordering direct from Amazon.

  3. I’d definitely get a Kindle if it had a full color screen that did nor emit light since LCDs are horrible for long reading periods. I remember seeing a company somewhere on Youtube working on technology like this. I jsut don’t recall where on Youtube. More magazines would be available if only there was a color screen.

    I agree with you completely. I use post-its for my books in school so I can easily locate and go to the pages with post-its. In the Kindle, there is no such feature. I don’t know where I had previously left notes. The Kindle needs a menu feature where there is a list of pages with the first part of notes to make locating them easier.

  4. Lisa at Real Club Cancun

    I have been debating getting Kindle. I love books. I like to have books around. I like to read two or three books at a time. I love how the books look piled up and stacked on shelves around my house and my desk. I am not convinced that I will like the kindle as much but I love the idea of not carrying multiple books while traveling. Is Kindle the best or should I look into the Ipad or an android?

  5. Thank you for this very-detailed review, Ivana.

    I really have no major desire to purchase one, but if I traveled more (which I may do next year) I may grab one.

    I guess that I’m pretty comfortable with the technology I already use…my PC. And when I travel, my laptop and Blackberry.

    Again, thanks for a solid review.

    The Franchise King®

  6. Wow everyone! I’m so glad this review struck home for you guys. I also have an eye pad with a kindle app, but like Andre said it’s distracting – for me, it’s like reading odd a computer screen. That’s Fine sometimes, but not for extended periods. And the sun glare is really straining.

  7. I’m looking forward to the second and third parts. Do you have any idea when they will be posted?

  8. Great first part of the review Ivana. Amazon is great at upselling, that’s for sure. I believe all us marketers could learn a thing or two from them.

  9. @Jonathan I’m not sure maybe next week.

  10. Fun read. Just wanted to add that you -can- bookmark (to dog-ear) a page and even put a note in a specific spot or highlight a passage.

    The shortcut for a straight bookmark is alt-b, which is a toggle as you can press it again and UNbookmark a page. You’ll see the dog-ear at top right when you do this.

    Later try Menu button and select “My Notes and Marks” and you’ll be shown a list of the book locations noted or marked (linked so you can click to get there) along with surrounding text so you can see which is the one you want.

    When you’re through with an action and want to get ‘back’ to a page you were on last before ‘jumping’ to another page via a link, just press the ‘Back’ button.

    Hope you continue to enjoy the Kindle.

  11. Great review, thanks for all the great info on the kindle. I was considering purchasing one but the fact of having all your books in one place is abit much for me. Also, is it possible to transfer files to “lend” books to your friends? Sharing a good book is what it’s all about!

  12. Well James, I don’t think that you can share books- that is a bummer. But you know I could be wrong. They do have the ability to “share” links and quotes from the book on twitter – I’ve used that. I’m not sure about Facebook, I want to say that too,but I am not sure right now.

    Kindle does offer quite a bit of free content as a preview. So your friends can decide if they want to buy the book and the books are reasonably priced. I feel like I’ve heard of a feature that allows for some kind of sharing. For example, I’m sitting in a library now and they are featuring e-books that you can “take out” for some time. That might be an ever better alternative.

  13. Yes, in fact now you can share with another user and for 14 days, the book disappears from your collection and appears in the borrowers collection, and then it automagically returns where it came from.
    Brilliant!

  14. Thanks for the great heads-up on Kindle. I’m still trying to catch up with John Locke’s strategies. I would love to have you review my book The Parrot’s Perch available on Kindle, e-book, hardcover and paperback on Amazon.com and BN.com and IndieBookseller.com