Unexpected Enthusiasm Edition: The Kindle Fire
Surprise! I love my e-reader!
Yesterday, I had a rheumatology appointment. It took three and a half hours for me to get in and out of that dreary, constantly-under-construction UW medical building. Yes, if you want to suck the will to live out of a person, I’m afraid the hospital environment does a great job!
But, knowing I was going to be trapped in a waiting room for hours, I unwrapped an early Christmas present from my parents: The Kindle Fire. I knew there were going to be practical advantages to having an e-reader, though I’m a born-and-bred book lover (my grandmother and I recently bonded over our mutual unwillingness to get rid of old books.) But what I didn’t expect?
How much I’d love it!
The picture quality is beautiful. I tried streaming a couple of things, including the classic movie “Christmas in Connecticut” (Another unexpected Christmas movie that’s a sharp critique of the expectations of working women to be both domestic goddess and shrewd moneymaker) – and it looked better – better – than my television. The sound quality was better than my laptop’s speaker system. And Glenn downloaded the Kindle version of She Returns to the Floating World – and it looked exactly right! Line breaks preserved, everything. The only downside was that with the Kindle version, you don’t get to see the full impact of the beautiful color cover of Rene Lynch’s art work (it’s there, but smaller, and in black and white.) Still, it was much better than I had expected after all the hullaballoo about how troublesome poetry was on e-readers. And definitely I’m giving credit to the Kitsune Books editors (thanks guys) for taking their time and doing it right with the e-reader conversion – a troublesome, time-consuming process. Now, I’m really looking forward to reading this anthology on my new toy!
The screen was easy to read. The only thing I’m finding difficult is getting the much-discussed free access to many classic works (I haven’t figured out where to find those yet, and Amazon – for some unknown reason – doesn’t make it easy to access free content.)
There’s also a way to access your music on the “cloud,” which I haven’t done yet, and since the Fire is color, it might be a good way to read magazines as well – I haven’t tried it yet. You can stream free content if you sign up for Amazon Prime, I believe – some television, some movies, some books and music – but you can’t download it for non-wi-fi times.
Anyway, as someone who loves book and hated – HATED – learning to use her smart phone (which I’m still in the process of doing, if you want to know the truth) – the Kindle Fire is easy to use, beautiful, and just plain exciting for anyone who travels a lot (or is stuck in waiting rooms a lot.)
And don’t be afraid to read poetry on it! The screen even flips so you can read long lines. I’m excited to be able to bring more poetry with me wherever I go!