What's Your Kindle-book's Name?
I can use about 1% of my computer's functions, and about the same on my camera. Our lives these days are filled with gadgets that can do far more than we ever have the time or inclination to figure out.
So in the helpful spirit that sparks and crackles from Authors Electric, I thought I'd pass on a few of the things I've learned about my Kindle. I daresay you already know many, but I hope there may be just one little wrinkle that's new to you.
Kindles are wonderful tools for writers.
Not only can you use them to check the appearance of any e-books you’re
creating, but you can use them for proof-reading.
If you give talks, you can put your notes on the kindle and
read them from there (which still strikes many people as 'cool'.)
If your Kindle has a wi-fi connection, you can email
documents directly to it, because your Kindle has its own unique email
address. To find yours, go to the ‘Home’ screen on
your Kindle and press ‘Menu’. Go to ‘settings’
and you’ll find a lot of information, including your Kindle’s name and its
email address. If you attach a document
to an email, and send it to this address, it will arrive on your Kindle.
If you don’t have a wi-fi connection, Amazon will send your
document to your mailbox, or you can download from the 'Manage Your Kindle' section of your Amazon account. Download to
your computer and drag and drop it to your kindle via a connecting cable.
Other people can email documents to your kindle in this way
too – and can loan you Kindle books (though Amazon takes the loan back after a
fortnight.) However, this will cost you
20p per MB, though you can set a limit by going to the ‘Manage Your Kindle’
section of your Amazon account.
When I’m proof-reading my ebooks, I like to have the master-copy
open on my laptop while I read on the Kindle. Each time I spot a typo, I
correct the master – but I know that Kath Roberts, erstwhile of this blog,
likes to use her Kindle to proof-read away from her computer. She does it by
using the ‘Add a Note or Highlight’ tool.
To find this, have the book or document you want to annotate
open on your Kindle. Click Menu. Using
the edges of the navigation square, move to ‘View Notes and Highlights’, and
click. Then either add a note, using the Kindle’s rather clumsy key-board, or
highlight whatever it is you want to
find.
You can access ‘Add a Bookmark’ in the same way. Click on
this and Kindle ‘folds down’ a corner of
a page, to remind you that a mark is there – but you find them again by using
‘View Notes and Highlights’, as before. I’ve found this extremely useful with
reference books, as I can mark any passage I think I might find useful. It’s
very quick and easy to find them again. Once located in ‘View Notes and
Highlights’, you click on the marked passages and jump straight to them. (I recently read a piece complaining that e-readers couldn't replace paper books because you 'couldn't make notes in the margins.' Well, ha! Not only can you make notes in your e-books, you can jump straight to them without having to rely on bookmarks whichfall out.)
You can highlight any passage you especially liked in any
book, and want to find again quickly. If
you have wi-fi, you can share these with the wider Kindle-reading public, and
discover what annotates their Kindle.
These notes are automatically backed up to Amazon, where all
your purchased e-books are stored – as, indeed, are any personal documents you’ve
emailed to your Kindle.
Anything you delete from your Kindle, deliberately or
accidentally, is stored in your Amazon Archive, and can be downloaded again
whenever you like, either to your Kindle or to your computer. Click Home, click Menu, and the third item
down is ‘View Archived Items’. I’ve just noticed that I have ‘The Crimson Petal and the White’ in there, which I loved. I must download it again.
Collections
I quickly grew tired of clicking through page after page of
books on my kindle in order to find the one I wanted. I have 97 books on my Kindle, and
I know some people have a lot more.
I discovered that the Kindle lets you sort your books and documents in several
ways.
Go to the Home screen and, along the top you’ll see: Most
Recent First, Title, Author, Collections.
Click on any of these, and the Kindle instantly re-sorts your
books and documents. Most Recent First
puts the last thing you downloaded, or were reading, at the top.
Title obviously sorts them by title, in alphabetical order,
and Author sorts them alphabetically by author.
Collections is a little more complicated, but I find it
useful. It sorts your books into folders. What’s more, it allows you to put the same
book into several folders – so, for instance, my Complete M R James could go
into the ‘M R James’ folder and the ‘Ghost Stories’ folder.
Georgette Heyer |
Georgette Heyer could go into ‘History, fiction’ and
‘Romance.’ Moffat’s ‘Story of the Border Reivers’ could go into ‘History, fact’ and ‘Research.’ I find this makes it easier to find the book
I want, or the one that matches my mood.
To make a Collection, go to the Home screen, and click
Menu. Click the option Create New
Collection. Enter and save your chosen Collection name.
(Should you ever want to disband a
collection, highlight it on Home screen, click Menu, and choose Rename
Collection, or Delete Collection. This will NOT delete your books, magazines or
documents – it will only remove the, if you like, virtual elastic band which
has bundled them together under the Collection name.
To add books to your new collection: first find the collection on your Home
screen.
Move the 5-way navigator (the little square) to the right.
This brings you to a menu, with an icon displaying one of the book jackets in
the collection. The Menu choices are:
Open Collection – which displays all the books in it.
Add/Remove Items – This takes you back to the Home Screen.
You will see that the first book now has a thick, dark line beneath it, with a
label ‘Add to this collection.’
This book may or may not be one that you want to add to your
new collection. If it is, click the
centre of the square (OK) and it will be added.
(Or Removed, if it’s already in the collection.)
If the book isn’t one you want to either Add or Remove, then go on
down the page as you would normally. If none
of the books on that page are ones you want to Add or Remove, then click to
turn the page, as normal.
Books already in the Collection will have a tick to the
right of them. When you find a book you want to add or remove, click on it with
the central square. If it’s in the Collection, it will be removed. If it's not already in the Collection, it will be added.
When you’ve added all the books you want, go to the bottom
of the screen, and click Done.
Amazon say you can’t build Collections unless your Kindle
has been connected by wi-fi at least once; and you cannot, as yet, add
magazines to Collections on Kindle keyboard.
You can, however, sort personal documents and audio-books in this way.
Adding a book to a collection doesn’t alter the book in
anyway, but Amazon ‘tags’ it. This tag
is preserved until you remove it. Archived items will retain their tag, and if
you download them again, they will return to the Collection you associated with
them.
I hope this helps you organise all those new books you've added after Christmas, with your Amazon gift-token.
Susan Price is the award-winning author of The Ghost Drum and The Sterkarm Handshake.
Her website is here.
And her blog is here.
I hope this helps you organise all those new books you've added after Christmas, with your Amazon gift-token.
Susan Price is the award-winning author of The Ghost Drum and The Sterkarm Handshake.
Her website is here.
And her blog is here.
Comments
However, I'm constantly struggling thinking I should get hold of another format ereader to check properly how Kindle and ibooks actually work. So I'm wondering between Kindle Fire and ipad. But I'm finding it hard to justify - they seem to be great if you want to do all kinds of other things than read ebooks, but I just want to READ EBOOKS and see how the interfaces work with the various SHOPS. Whenever I actually try and work out which is best for EBOOK reading I can't beat the Kobo. But I'd be interested for others to make the case for what's good (and not so good) about Kindle Fire and ipad. Mind you, by the time I a) have the money and b) get round to a decision both will be out of date and something new will be there. So - what is the EBOOK READING experience like on Kindle Fire and ipad folks?
I think the Paperwhite looks nice for just reading, also the "simple kindle", but they are not so good for making notes.
I must admit pdfs (if proofreading a typeset print book) come out very small on the Kindle, which can be a problem in bad light/if you are getting long sighted - I use the zoom facility to get around this, but it's a bit time consuming!