Reviewed by 
John C Abell 
  ·  June 15, 2011
By now, most everyone in your circle of friends has played with a Kindle and an iPad. Fewer have picked up a 
Nook. But I’d urge you to give this dark horse a shot.
I’ve been testing the 
newest black and white version of Barnes & Noble’s e-reader, and, well, you can color me impressed.
The 
freshly-updated Nook  is smaller and lighter than Amazon’s Kindle, and on those qualities  alone it stands a excellent chance of capturing some more market share  in the e-ink device game. But the new Nook also embraces social media  sharing (and does it well enough), eliminates all buttons save a “Home”  key (where’d they get that idea?) and ambidextrous page-turners, and  introduces a responsive e-ink touchscreen that controls an intuitive  interface.
The Wi-Fi versions of both Amazon’s and Barnes & Noble’s  similar-sized black and white e-readers are priced at $140, though  Amazon does sell a cheaper, ad-supported Kindle for $114.
As much as the new Nook implores you to choose it over the Kindle,  Amazon’s device isn’t its real adversary. Both devices share a common  enemy: the tablet. iPads and Honeycombs and other touchscreen devices  that can be used not only to read books, but watch videos, browse the  web, mow your lawn and whatever else.
As my Wired colleague Brian X. Chen writes in his new book, 
Always On,  “Soon, manufacturers will no longer be able to sell single-function  gadgets lacking an internet connection because those gadgets will be  obsolete.” (For fans of meta, I read this passage on the Nook).
So the killer app (pun intended) for any e-reader has to be that it  makes you forget there are other ways to read digital books that don’t  make you to lug around yet another device that only does one thing. As 
a lover of e-reading who’s never considered owning an e-reader, I was going to be a tough sell. And while I have some issues with the Nook, it is the first e-reader I would consider owning.
Why? The Nook is the first mechanism that has called me to read books  for fun in ages. Software apps for e-reading are convenient, but they  run on devices which are either too small (a smartphone) or too  cumbersome and heavy (a tablet). This particular reader just feels  better in the hand than others I have tried.
It’s not perfect. The touchscreen keyboard is merely adequate, but  it’s fine for the little amount of typing you’ll do. And the Nook’s  social layer seems like a work in progress, but it’s positioned only as a  natural extension of the reading experience and does not feel at all  forced.
But you spend the vast majority of your time using an e-reader for  one thing alone: reading. It doesn’t need to be fancy, it needs to be  comfortable, convenient, and accessible. At all those things, the Nook  excels.
The newest Nook is so thin and light — about seven ounces, four less  than its predecessor — that it’s really like carrying nothing at all.  It’s not that much smaller than the Kindle, but at this scale, the  difference is very noticeable. Most of the saving comes from using a  pop-up touchscreen keyboard instead of a hardware keyboard. It fits  comfortably in the back pocket of a pair of pants (not that you’d carry  it that way) and I actually “lost” it in my very compact Booq laptop  bag.
It’s easy to hold in any position, especially the all-important  standing-on-the-moving-train and lying-in-bed varieties. The  page-turning buttons are low-profile strips on either side of the face  of the device, rather than the edge, as is the case with the Kindle.  That seems to make it more natural to hold in one hand, since the entire  edge of device can be cradled without any accidental clicks.
The touchscreen introduces some quirks. It’s easier to lose your  place — I clicked on a footnote, and then something else accidentally,  and landed on a random page, completely lost and with no idea what page I  came from. It needs a way to retrace your steps. The touch keyboard is  good enough to tap type, but the cancel button is too big. Clumsy  fingers will lead to a lot of re-dos.
One other hardware quibble: The Nook is an e-ink reader, and like  other e-ink readers, it is almost useless in low light. As one who has  vowed to never again buy an Itty-Bitty Book Light, I’d happily give up  some of the device’s two-month power surplus for a bit of on-demand LED  glow. Tablets may be difficult to read in sunlight, but in low light,  they still win.
In addition to the software for buying books and managing purchases,  the Nook offers the three biggest sharing platforms: e-mail, Facebook  and Twitter. You can link your Facebook, Twitter and Gmail accounts, and  from there, recommend books to your friends and boast about your  progress. If you’d like, you can also build a network of Nook friends by  leveraging your Google contacts.
It’s refreshing that everything connects flawlessly on the backend, but the software clients flounder.
You can’t search your contacts when you want to e-mail — you have to  scroll through them, which is ridiculous if you have a bulging address  book.
When posting a tweet or a Facebook status message about a book, the  Nook also throws in a link to the book’s selling page on Barnes &  Noble’s website no matter what you write — fair enough, though if you  want to trash what you’re reading, that hardly seems like a prime  selling opportunity. Also, it is impossible to edit what the Nook  “writes” when you’re broadcasting your progress. The full title of the 
Always On  is 89 characters when you include the subtitle, and the “authors” are  listed as Brian Chen and Brian X. Chen (spoiler alert: it’s one guy).  And there’s nothing you can do about it. At least let me work in the  author’s Twitter @handle.
Overall, the social component is half-baked. It aspires to do the  quick hit things you might spontaneously want to do — “I’m halfway  through!” — in the context of your reading experience, but it can’t  compete with the social capabilities of your other mobile devices.
But hey, the Nook is for reading, not for tweeting. This is a pricey  gadget that’s competing with a free app — like the Kindle, there are  free Nook apps for phones and tablets — and as such, it has to offer a  kickass reading experience. And it does.
It seems likely to win many new converts who’ve found themselves  lured into Barnes & Noble’s brick-and-mortar retail stores to play  with the device. The Kindle may have the first-mover advantage and a  better-known name. But with this new version, the Nook is poised to  break away — at least until the tablet makers build an e-reading  experience good enough to render e-ink devices like these obsolete.
WIRED Nothing here gets in the way of a good read.  Six-inch e-ink screen is crisp. Epic battery life. Hardware design eases  one-handed operation. B&N sells over two million Nook books — more  than twice what Amazon offers for the Kindle, which is just shy of a  million titles.
TIRED Low light is a problem. Touch screen could be  better. Social tools are meh, and the e-mail client is especially weak.  Until e-book readers cost significantly less than $100 they won’t be  everywhere — razors exist to sell blades.