I tried these free and premium reader apps on my modded Fire Tablet—here’s the one I’m sticking with


If there is anything at all I’m obsessed with, it has to be modding Android devices/Fire Tablets and reading comics, books, magazines, and anything else I can get my grubby little hands on.

So it was only a matter of time before I combined the two hobbies into one. Since reading is such a large part of my daily routine, my modded Fire Tablet is the perfect home for my library. Some people prefer the Nook, e-ink Kindles, or even Kobo Readers. But me? I’m a Fire Tablet guy all the way.

I spent considerable time testing several popular reader apps (that have both free and premium versions) and found something useful in each of them.


Kindle bound by broken chains and a padlock.


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Finding alternative reader apps for a modded Fire Tablet

The Kindle app is fine, but sometimes you need to get out of the Amazon ecosystem

A Kindle library screen showing several books in two rows. Credit: David J. Buck / How-To Geek

If you’re an avid reader, chances are you might use the Kindle app or maybe Kobo Rakuten. Both are solid choices if you don’t mind being locked into a company’s ecosystem and storefront.

Last time I checked, the Kindle app can still display PDFs, although the experience varies greatly by device. You can also send compatible files using the Send to Kindle service, which handles EPUB conversions. My experience with Kobo is limited to when I bought (and later learned I didn’t own) some TMNT books last year. I was a bit disappointed with it.

So I tried some alternative apps.

Note: I haven’t put Calibre on this list, simply because I’ve already covered it previously and because it’s mostly a desktop app (although it’s a good idea to use it to convert books if you’re sending them to the Kindle app).

CDisplay Ex

The original comic book reader

Several issues of a comic book called "Code Monkey Save World" appear in the library for CDisplayEx. Credit: David J. Buck / How-To Geek

There is always some value in shelling out a few bucks for an ad-free experience. The free or ‘lite’ version of the app works great, but it’s horrendous when a random ad appears halfway through a comic you’re reading.

And they’re not single-page static ads, the likes of which you’ve seen in comic books of yore. No, they’re these awful, bordered, intrusive ads that practically require you to click on them or hide the ‘x’ in the corner.

It was worth the $6 not to deal with those. CdisplayEx handles CBZ/CBR format well, and it does a fantastic job of handling most document types in its mobile form.

So what about the reader? In short, it’s amazing.

For testing, I read a Byte magazine from 1978, courtesy of The Internet Archive, in CBR format. I also read the first issue of Nintendo Power, courtesy of Retro Mags, in CBZ format. The interface is intuitive, and it connects straight to your documents folder. I have everything stored locally on a high-storage SD card, but there are options to sync to other devices, which I 100% did right away.

Color correction worked wonders on the older magazines. Other features, while minimal, simply enhance the reading experience, like the ability to change the display to fill the screen, zoom, or display two pages at once. Other features I found less useful, like the different options to turn the page (I like to tap or swipe left; nothing more or less), and cropping the corners of the pages, did absolutely nothing to enhance the experience.

CdisplayEx excels at library Management and provides a fantastic reading experience for PDFs and comic book formats, which is my primary use case for this app. I sprang for premium because I read a ton of comics and old tech magazines, and because the ads are too invasive in the free version. Overall, it offers a solid experience and is definitely optimized for highly visual works.

Moon+ Reader

A versatile app for lots of text

An old science fiction story featuring an image of a pencil-drawn man open in Moon+ Reader. Credit: David J. Buck / How-To Geek

On my Fire Tablet, I found Moon+ Reader to be an impressive reader app with an excess of features. Moon+ Reader is the free version, while Moon+ Reader Pro is the premium version. Both of them work well.

In the free version of the app, I was able to read something like 60 pages or so before getting an ad. But the ad was so annoying, intrusive (I believe it was for Temu), and difficult to navigate away from, that I immediately went premium for a one-time purchase of $11.99.

If you can deal with the infrequent, yet disruptive, ads, the free version is great. Both versions are feature-rich, so you get a lot right out of the gate.

I tested the reader with some issues of a comic book I’m currently reading, and with two ePUB files: A Princess of Mars and an old science fiction story, courtesy of Project Gutenberg, and an Acoustic Guitar magazine I got with my digital subscription a few years ago. I used this one for long-form reading over more visually complex stuff.

Books, however, performed very well. Moon+ Reader provides the closest facsimile of e-ink I’ve found on any app. My tired old eyes tend to favor gray, sepia-tone, and dark mode. All of them are here and look good with the text displayed on them.

The ability to import is wonderful, but you can also grab public domain books directly from Project Gutenberg through the app itself via the Net Library option. Table of contents navigation is quite smooth, and thanks to this app, I’ve finally been able to dive into my copy of The Beato Book that I picked up back in 2017.

I tested the TTS feature on the pro version, and it was hilariously bad. I think this is one feature I’ll skip when using this app. It certainly does nothing for my hearing issues.

ReadEra

A well-rounded reader app with zero ads at any tier

The opening page of ReadEra showing four issues of Code Monkey Save World. Credit: David J. Buck / How-To Geek

I like ReadERA, and I’ve been using it for a little over a month now. It’s a powerhouse reading app that can handle a large variety of common file formats.

The best part of ReadEra is pure functionality with no ads whatsoever at the free level. You can just read and enjoy the features without Temu or some AI ad interrupting your book. It’s just you, a killer UI, and what’s on the page. The auto-detection for file types is phenomenal and really well done. Some of the other apps struggle a bit with sorting file formats properly.

The app has customization options based on format, so the menu will show you options for PDF or CBR, depending on your format. Everything I read on there was easy to read, looked good, and didn’t have any ads or other issues.

I tested all the different formats I used in the other apps, largely the same titles, and had a positive reading experience for each one. I also tested my copy of Code Monkey Save World that I received as a Kickstarter backer way back in 2013. It looked great, and I finally finished reading it, then ReadEra let me do a review of it with its built-in review prompt.

I’ve found ReadEra ideal for all of my file formats, and if I had to choose only one reader, the premium version would be my desert island pick.

Librera

The multi-purpose app that caters to musicians

The book, A Princess of Mars, being read in reader mode on Librera. Credit: David J. Buck / How-To Geek

Like most reader apps, Librera offers to load your entire library. It also offers three different modes. This is how they were laid out in the version I tested:

  • Book mode
  • Musician’s mode
  • Scroll mode
  • Text-to-Speech

There’s a free version that lets you skip ads for a few hours if you choose to watch a short one first. And you’ll want to do it because the ad placements are the worst of all on this app (out of the batch I tested). There’s a big video at the top of your library, and then there’s a full-page ad every so often. So keep that in mind if you test this one out.

A negative photo of the cover of acoustic guitar magazine in Librero. Credit: David J. Buck / How-To Geek

There’s an interesting feature called word replacement that lets you alter the text. It’s interesting in a curious sort of way. We have night and day modes here. The night mode in particular is very easy on the eyes due to the gray text. Aside from that, you can alter the font, which has a ton of fun options you don’t typically find in other apps.

The autorotation is a little stilted, but I quite like the blue light filter here. We have standard reading settings and some unique advanced settings like mirroring, loop scroll, and a reference mode similar to Calibre. Then you have the option to tweak the status bar.

I kept it gray.

Scroll mode is the equivalent of reading something in a browser. I immediately disliked it. I had to turn off my blue light filter and switch back to day mode because the colors were way off (it looked like an old film negative). Scrolling is also a bit clunky when reading a magazine or book, and the pages take too long to load.


Disable That Irritating AutoScroll Feature in Firefox


Disable That Irritating AutoScroll Feature in Firefox

So you try to middle click on a link on a page and miss the link… then the round “Auto Scroll” icon shows up and suddenly the page is moving around and scrolling all by itself. It drives me crazy, so when it was mentioned in the latest Coding Horror article I figured I would write it up in case anybody else wants to disable it.

I was eager to try musician mode because I’m learning more advanced guitar techniques and retraining myself on stuff I’ve forgotten over the years. It features auto-scroll for sheet music. I used it to check out a few exercises from my music book. It worked fine, and I could see using this app for sheet music, which is definitely a strong point.

Librera Musicians Mode in landscape. Credit: David J. Buck / How-To Geek

And then there’s text-to-speech mode. I did not like that, at all. The robotic voice, the hasty delivery, the unnatural sound. TTS feels like it has a long way to go for most of these apps, but this one did not live up to the hype.

Librera has some nice features, but I probably won’t use this app for much other than sheet music, since that’s its strong point.


Reading on a modded Fire Tablet has never been better

Reading a book in landscape mode on a Fire tablet. Credit: David J. Buck / How-To Geek

After spending considerable time with all of these apps, I will say that it’s hard to choose between them. It was a very tough decision, but I am sticking with ReadEra as my primary reading app on the modded Fire tablet.

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Even in the budget department, the Amazon Kindle is a stellar value, from its light and compact design, to its adjustable front light and 6-inch display.




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Recent Reviews


The arrival of another weekend means another opportunity for some escapism, and what better genre to provide that than science fiction and fantasy? Their advanced CGI capabilities, detailed lore, and ability to explore complex social issues in an allegorical setting are unbeatable at delivering on escapist entertainment, and that’s where we’re headed.

As you unwind this weekend, flip over to Amazon Prime Video and get lost in another world with these three proven sci-fi/fantasy shows to stream in the U.S.—our top pick being a surprisingly engaging reimagining of a classic historical legend.

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The Magicians

A darker Harry Potter story for adults

With over 60 episodes across 5 spectacular seasons to immerse yourself in, The Magicians is a fantastic dark fantasy/sci-fi series based on the trilogy novels by Lev Grossman about a group of friends who discover that magic is real and adventurous but not always like you’d expect.

Quentin Coldwater (The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel’s Jason Ralph) is a highly intelligent but socially withdrawn 20-something-year-old secretly obsessed with a series of fantasy novels he read as a child about a magical land called Fillory. Outside of that, his life is super dull… until he’s mysteriously admitted to a secret, exclusive college of magic in Upstate New York. There, he’s introduced to a thorough, rigorous education in the practice of modern sorcery, but the gift doesn’t bring the happiness, adventure, and meaning he thought it would. When he and his friends discover that the otherworldly Fillory really exists, their entire lives change in a flash.

While the magic is fun and all, the focus here lies on the consequences of using it and the complex emotions of series characters, who are flawed and navigating trauma. Fans of the genre will love the show’s witty, sometimes hedonistic take on magic education and fantasy tropes, which the show does a spectacular job of subverting by showing that magic is fickle and guarantees nothing. Furthermore, its blend of serious emotional stakes with whimsical meta absurdity and world-building makes it even more unique.

2

Humans

Blurred lines between humans and machines

A sci-fi must-watch for fans of the genre, Humans is based on the Swedish award-winning drama Real Humans, which explores themes of artificial intelligence sentience, human-robot interactions, AI effects on the future of humanity, and defining humanity in a way that feels topical and thought-provoking.

Set in a parallel universe where technology is highly advanced, and life-like humanoids called Synths are the must-have machines for every household, the core story follows a small group of sentients trying to survive in a world that views them as property. The drama kicks off when the Hawkins family purchases a used Synth, who is not who they think she is, leading to suspenseful consequences full of high stakes for their family life. It also explores how society treats Synths, drawing parallels to racism and sexism.

Humans is grounded and emotional in its otherworldly exploration of AI and consciousness in a near-future world, excelling at analyzing their social, moral, and familial impacts. Rather than focusing only on apocalyptic threats, the series hones in on one family’s daily interactions with their Synth. Fans of shows like Black Mirror and Westworld will love it for its much more intimate and character-driven look at technology.

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The Winter King

A less-fantastical version of Game of Thrones

I am always down for getting into a good fantasy series, especially if it revolves around the whole King Arthur-Merlin legend. Right now, you can stream 2023’s The Winter King, which reimagines the Arthurian legend from the perspective of a former warrior who narrates the series as an elderly monk.

A gritty adaptation of Bernard Cornwell’s Warlord Chronicles about King Arthur, the series is set in a brutal, war-torn Britain following the Roman withdrawal. The story details the obstacles and struggles Arthur Pendragon (Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.’s Iain De Caestecker) faces as he rises in rank from an outcast warlord to the leader and unifier of broken British kingdoms. With the Saxon forces invading through little resistance, Arthur must navigate treacherous political landscapes while also contending with his doomed romance with Guinevere (Hotel Costiera‘s Jordan Alexandra).

What’s so watch-worthy about this series is its structured framework as a chronicle of events told through flashbacks by former warrior-turned-monk Derfel (Rogue Heroes’ Stuart Campbell). It’s a genuinely compelling interpretation of a legendary time in history, so expect a super-dark, otherworldly portrayal of 5th-century Britain rife with plenty of power struggles, detailed battle scenes, bloody warfare, pagan rites, vengeance, and heavy, ornate royal robes.


The fun doesn’t stop here, though. No matter your genre interests, Prime Video has an excellent selection of shows to help you relax, unwind, and escape straight into another world. Despite the platform’s recent price hike, the subscription is still worth keeping for all the gems that just keep on coming in droves. Stay tuned, because more is in store, and we’re the ones who’ll always have you covered.

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