Amazon’s Kindle has changed the ereader and ebook experience completely.

This isn’t the first time we’re doingone of these listsand it won’t be the last.

Granted, it’s a completely different pop in of screen, but you might still buy ebooks.

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Android users would know well that the current Kindle app is bloated and clunky.

The Kindle Lite app, in fact, is akin to the web-based Kindle Cloud Reader for desktops.

It lets you read ebooks, get recommendations to buy other books, but not much else.

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Kindle Lite also has a handy screen to show how much data or storage the app is using.

Kindle Lite launched in India and is slowly expanding to other countries.

But you should probably know where to look for it.

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Just Kindle Books is the place to get updates on free and discounted Kindle ebooks.

The site doesn’t bother with other ebook formats or stores.

But once in a while, you’ll get a doozy.

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But did you know that Doyle also wrote another character called Professor Challenger, who has five science-fiction/fantasy books?

This is why you need Aisha of Global Grey.

She’s going to tell you how to download all those books for free.

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You probably know that classic books are available for free on sites likeProject Gutenberg.

But Aisha goes the extra mile.

She collects some of the best book series in collections that you’ll find easy to download and read.

What you’ll find here are classics or highly recommended scholarly books.

The site does everything that a Kindle user could possibly want.

The best feature is book tracking.

eReaderIQ has an advanced search engine and browsing option that is far better than Amazon’s own.

If you’re outside of these three countries, your local Kindle store won’t work.

Then it’s all about selecting what you want and sending it.

Keendly does the heavy lifting of taking any web article and formatting it for Kindle-based reading.

If you don’t mind the bad formatting, you canuse IFTTT to schedule articlesto your Kindle for free.

I’d also recommend checking outReabble, a web-based RSS reader made for the Kindle internet tool.