Chapter 2 Getting To Know Kindle Content; The Home Screen; Special Offers And Sponsored Screensavers; Kindle Books - Amazon KINDLE - User Manual

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Chapter 2
Getting to Know Kindle Content
The Kindle Home screen gives you an overall picture of what you currently have on your
Kindle. It shows you what you are reading, and where you are in your reading. It also allows
you to remove content from your Kindle and to move content from Amazon to your Kindle.
Read below for more details.

2.1 The Home Screen

The Home screen displays a list of all of your Kindle reading materials—books, newspapers,
magazines, blogs, PDF files, personal documents, and audiobooks. It serves as a personal
bookshelf for all of your reading material, as well as a starting point to access other Kindle
features.
To display the Home screen, press the Home button on your Kindle. By default, the Home
screen lists all of the items that you have on your Kindle beginning with the most recently
viewed (or acquired) items. Each type of content has a slightly different description and label.
You can read more about the types of content available in

Special Offers and Sponsored Screensavers

For Kindle with Special Offers, you will see special offers at the bottom of the Home screen.
To view additional details, navigate to the offer banner and press the center of the 5-way
controller. In some cases, you can purchase special offers directly from your Kindle.

Kindle Books

Books are shown by title and author. Below the book title are a series of dots which give you
an approximation of how long the book is. Bold dots within the series indicate how far along
you are in the book based on the last page you viewed.

Periodicals

Periodicals include newspapers and magazines that can be purchased as a single issue or
as a subscription delivered on a regular basis. Your Home screen lists the most recent issue
of each periodical you have on your Kindle. Older issues appear inside a grouping called
Periodicals: Back Issues. Selecting the grouping takes you to a screen that displays the back
issues of all the periodicals you have on your Kindle. Note that Kindle automatically deletes
issues that are more than seven issues old to free up space for new content. An exclamation
point
next to an issue indicates that it will be deleted within 24 hours. To keep an issue,
see
"More about Managing Items. "

Collections

Collection names appear in an italicized font to differentiate them from books and other
items. The number of items in each collection is displayed in parentheses to the right of
the collection's name.

Blogs

Blogs are subscription-based and appear on the Home screen as a single entry like books.
As additional blog content arrives, it is added to the item and older entries are rolled off,
much like a blog works on a computer.
Kindle User's Guide

Chapter 2 Getting to Know Kindle Content

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