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I don't think you need a case. Maybe an envelope if you're going to toss it in your bag with a bunch of scratchy things, but I've stopped using mine. They're pretty durable in recent iterations. I don't think a screen protector is necessary either - scratches are way less of a big deal on a non-backlit screen.
I was never on the "I like real books and don't need a kindle" bandwagon but I've seen plenty of people who were change their minds after using a Kindle for a while. I would encourage you to buy one book that you think you will really enjoy reading on the kindle (or borrow one from the Kindle Prime library, or your local library which may have a better Kindle selection than you think), maybe something kind of addictive, so you really read the whole book on the kindle, quickly. I've seen a few people get "that book they always meant to read" but didn't really want to read, and blame their lack of interest in reading it on the kindle. If you avoid that, and read a real page-turner, I think you might be surprised how much you enjoy the experience.
I'd be happy to lend you a Kindle book, to get you started. I can e-mail you a list of what I've got available to lend.
me too! I am happy to loan as well.
Ooh, thanks! I'll see what's available and let you know.
It's also really useful for books that are just difficult to read physically because they're too big to carry around--like War & Peace, or Jonathan Strange.
I'm looking at replacing my Kindle (it's a 1st-gen one) with one of the new ones: let us know how you like the Touch, would you? I've seen some mixed reviews about it.
I've almost bought Anathem on my kindle at least three times for the physical issue. I already own Crytonomicon that way. Honestly, I think the late HP books are also physically uncomfortable to read, and am ready for some HP e-books already.
I've played with the touch some, Consuela, on a co-worker's device. I liked it a lot - enough that I would get it instead of the Keyboard, which I've been using and loving for a year. The touch screen has better feedback than I would expect - plenty good even for long comments, though if I'm planning to really comment on a book I'll open it on Kindle for PC no matter what. I'm getting one for my wife to replace her Kindle 2, because the screen contrast is so much better.
I've almost bought Anathem on my kindle at least three times for the physical issue.
How easy is it on an e-reader to flip back and forth from the text to the glossary at the end? (That's both a real question and snark directed at Stephenson and his made-up words.)
I have not needed to do so for REAMDE. Does that book not have a glossary?
I have not needed to do so for REAMDE. Does that book not have a glossary?
I haven't picked it up yet, so I don't know. I'm still recovering from Anathem (and considering re-reading it.)
On the Nook, you can bookmark the glossary when you first start, and then bookmark where you are whenever you want to flip back to the glossary. It's not onerous, though I think I'd find it a little annoying.
I flip to the footnotes in Pratchett super easily on the Nook. But that's tied in notes, so I don't know how easy it would be for something that wasn't linked.