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Rather bafflingly, though, right now this only seems available on the Fire tablets Bookerly is now available on the Fire tablets and on iOS devices, and not on the Kindle readers, the devices that would benefit the most, surely? It’s had the effect of making me slightly disappointed every time I switch back to reading on my Voyage, which is surely not the intended effect.
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This is a nice indication that perhaps the Kindle team do care, after all. A device that’s dedicated to words on a page, one with a screen this beautiful, deserves better type options. The Voyage still only offers six typefaces–many of them poor choices for this context–and still force-justifies every line (with no hyphenation!), creating variable-length gaps between words just so the right margin is straight rather than ragged. Unfortunately, Amazon has invested all of this effort in improved reading technology only to find itself completely at sea when it comes to typography. It’s very nice, isn’t it? Like a lot of people, I’d assumed that Amazon had little regard for typography since the Kindle Voyage (a lovely device, which I will get around to reviewing at some point) shipped without any new typefaces to match its lovely new, Retina-style screen.Īs Jason Snell put it, in his Voyage review: Ladies and gentlemen, meet Bookerly, Amazon’s new Kindle font:
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Well, as a very low-key typographic geek, how could I resist? And I was doing just that on my Kindle Fire tablet a few days ago, when a notice popped up offering me a new font. Now, make sure you know where the font file you want to add is located.
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This opens the book editing utility (essentially, the part of Calibre that’s like Sigil). Most importantly, it fatigues the eyes less over long sessions, and it looks classy. Another excellent easy to read font for ebooks is Baskerville. Not paper books necessarily, but book-length pieces of work. To add a font to your ebook in Calibre, first open the book in Calibre’s book editor by right-clicking (or control-clicking) on the title, then selecting Edit Book. Bookerly replaced Caecilia as the default font for the 2015 Kindle Paperwhite (3rd generation) and it has been used as the default font on Amazon's following e-readers. One of my sorta-but-not-really New Year’s Resolutions is to read books a little more.
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