I love the Kindle Paperwhite, and think it’s an awesome piece of tech for people who want to read on the go or even at home without a clunky book weighing them down. However, it’s hard to get past the crashes, so maybe wait until these get sorted out.
Kindle Paperwhite (2021, 11th Gen) price and configuration options
There are three models of the Kindle Paperwhite. First, the regular Kindle Paperwhite, which is outfitted with 8GB of storage and runs for $139 ($159 without ads).
Kindle Paperwhite (2021, 11th Gen) design
There’s not a lot going on with the Kindle Paperwhite’s design, and I’m okay with that. The black slate is clean and simple. The face features average-sized bezels and a Kindle logo at the very bottom. The Kindle Paperwhite comes in at 6.9 x 4.9 x 0.32 inches and 7.23 ounces, making it thin, lightweight, and — most importantly — portable. The Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition is the same size, but is three grams heavier.
Kindle Paperwhite (2021, 11th Gen) display
The Kindle Paperwhite rocks a 6.8-inch, 300 ppi (pixel-per-inch) glare-free display. It’s larger than the previous generation and 10% brighter at the max setting. You can transition between a warm light and a dark mode. The warm light also features a scheduler, which lets you adjust when it turns on, similar to what you find on a smartphone. The brightness scales between 0 to 24, 0 being no light, which looks as close as you can get to a real book, and 24 being the one that produces the most light in a dark space.
Kindle Paperwhite (2021, 11th Gen) interface
At the top is the search bar next to your cart and the settings menu. There’s also a tab at the bottom that lets you switch over to your Library. You can filter your library between the types of books as well as books you read or haven’t read. And you can even sort them.
Kindle Paperwhite (2021, 11th Gen) reading experience
I absolutely love reading books on the Kindle Paperwhite. I had been reading the physical copy of The Witcher: Sword of Destiny, but I wasn’t motivated to pick it up again until I got the Kindle Paperwhite. There are a ton of customization options for the text on screen while you’re reading. For those who don’t want to fuss around with settings, there are four options: Compact, Standard, Large and Low Vision. But if you’re so inclined, you can jump into the options to customize the font, layout and more. In the Layout tab, you can configure the orientation of the text (landscape or portrait), adjust the margins (edge-to-edge, narrower and narrowest), change the alignment, and shrink or expand the spacing. In the More tab are options to track your reading progress, show the clock while reading, identify book mentions, show info about the book, display popular highlights, reveal the highlight menu, enable page turn animation, enable Word Wise, and turn on Pinyin, which can reveal pronunciation guides above Chinese characters. I love the Page Turn Animation because it feels so natural when you’re flipping through a book and getting to the next one. And if there’s ever a word that I don’t recognize, I can press and hold it, and a dictionary or Wikipedia entry will pop up. However, it can be difficult to hit smaller text, and sometimes the Kindle mistakenly highlights an entire sentence as opposed to one word. You can also bookmark, flip through the contents, word search and even disable the touchscreen. The bookmarking is not as clean as it could be, since you have to double-click to bookmark a page and you have to click to bookmark a page in order to see your bookmarks. Turning off the touchscreen means the only inputs the Kindle will register are those for flipping the pages, which is neat for those who need to grip onto the screen itself. One of the coolest things about the Kindle Paperwhite is the X-Ray feature, which provides some information about notable clips of dialogue, characters, terms and images.
Kindle Paperwhite (2021, 11th Gen) performance
The Kindle Paperwhite is great when it works, but frustrating as hell when it doesn’t. The Kindle Paperwhite responds to my gestures and movements swiftly, but with just enough latency to remind you that you’re using an e-reader. Meanwhile, the web browser might as well be useless due to how slow the tablet is. I also experienced a number of crashes while navigating through the Kindle Paperwhite. The e-reader would crash every time I quickly flipped through the settings while reading a book. I had to hold the power button to turn it off and reset it in order to get it to work again. That was frustrating because any notes or bookmarks I made were not saved. And as I tried to replicate this by adjusting the brightness of the Paperwhite, the e-reader crashed on me.
Kindle Paperwhite (2021, 11th Gen) battery life
That may be true if you’re using the device at low brightness, which almost no one does. After putting three hours into my reading, I saw a drop of 20% in battery life when using it close to maximum brightness. So, by my estimate, that’s roughly 15 hours of battery life, which is still good.
Kindle Paperwhite (2021, 11th Gen) software and warranty
While it’s easy enough to use, there’s a lot going on in the background of the Kindle Paperwhite. When diving into the settings, you can adjust things about your account, the household and family library, and the Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. The Bluetooth in the Kindle Paperwhite lets you connect to a speaker so those with a visual impairment can use the VoiceView Screen Reader feature. In the Device Options tab, you can display the cover of the book you’re reading (super helpful to remind you that you need to continue), reveal device info, adjust the warmth schedule, set a passcode, and restart or reset your Kindle. The Reading Options tab provides two options for Page Refresh (refresh the display with every page turn) and Vocabulary Builder (remember dictionary lookups). I recommend enabling both of these, especially page refresh if you want to avoid those screen burn-in moments. You can adjust your language in the Language & Dictionaries tab, or enable VoiceView Screen Reader (provide spoken feedback when you touch items on the screen) and invert black and white in the Accessibility tab. The Kindle Paperwhite comes with a one-year limited warranty. If you go with the Kindle Paperwhite Kids Edition, you’ll get a two-year warranty.
Bottom line
The Kindle Paperwhite is a great e-reader for people looking to simplify their reading experience for an affordable price. It’s sleek, bright, long-lasting and easy to use – well, when it doesn’t crash. The Kindle Paperwhite has helped me get back into reading, so overall, I would recommend it to anyone considering making the switch from paper to screen.