![]() ![]() I love my books but every now and then I’ve often thought how easy it must be to read on the Kindle.ĭon’t get me wrong, I love books because they are the ‘real thing’ bringing that new ‘book smell’ and you can’t beat the physical feeling of turning page after page when you just have to finish that chapter.īut sometimes the cons of having the physical copies can be glaringly obvious. I tried Amazon’s 2022 release, priced at £84.99, which will probably be reduced in price in the Black Friday sales.ĭescribed as the lightest and most compact Kindle yet, its size and weight was one of the reasons why it attracted me. I have to admit though, the Kindle has been tempting me for a long time and I could no longer ignore the pros of having such a gadget. I felt guilty for even looking at such a thing, giving a slight nod of promise to my books on the shelf that this didn’t mean I was abandoning them. ![]() I was weighing this up in my mind as I researched Amazon’s newest Kindle. READ MORE: Black Friday 2022 latest deals on Amazon, Sky, Dyson, Ninja, Oodie, Boots and more Amazon first released their Kindle back in 2007 and I can remember reading many scaremongering articles at the time about how it could be the end of paperback books as we know it.įast forward more than ten years and I still haven’t bought one of the many editions of the Kindle, (with my packed bookshelves at home acting as my smug stubbornness to not conform to the tech), until now that is.ĭoes having a Kindle mean you can no longer have or buy paperback books anymore? A book is a book right? No matter what form you enjoy it in, it’s the words that matter at the end of the day.
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