Skip to content ↓

Kindle + Evernote = ♥

As time goes on, I find myself doing more and more of my reading on my Kindle, and taking advantage of its super-simple ability to make notes and highlights. At the same time, I find myself relying on Evernote to help me retain and organize information. Books hold the information I want to know while Evernote holds the information I want to retain. When I put the two of them together, I get a powerful system to record and remember what I have read. Let me share a simple technique to quickly and easily get every one of your Kindle notes and highlights into Evernote.

Install Evernote Web Clipper

Before you do anything else, visit Evernote and install their Web Clipper browser extension, available for all major browsers.

Visit kindle.amazon.com

Once you have installed the Web Clipper, you are ready to track down your notes and highlights. Visit http://kindle.amazon.com and sign in using your Amazon username and password:

Kindle

Locate Your Book

After logging in, click on “Your Books” to see a list of the books you own in Kindle format:

Your Books

Click the title you would like to export to Evernote:

Kindle

Note: If you have a huge library, see my note below titled “For Big Libraries.”

Find Your Highlights

Click on “You have X highlighted passages:”

Highlights

Use Evernote’s Web Clipper

You will now see a page with a simple listing of all of your notes and highlights, just like this:

Highlights

Note: Do not scroll all the way to the bottom of this page; for some reason, doing that will automatically load the highlights from the next book on the list.

Click the Evernote Web Clipper icon in your browser:

Clipper

Choose what notebook you’d like to save your highlights to, add any tags you would like associated with them, and then click “Save.” Be sure to leave “Article” selected under the “Clip” heading.

Save

Give Evernote a few seconds, and it will save every one of your highlights. Now simply open up Evernote, and allow it to synchronize. And just like that, you will have all your highlights saved forever:

Book Notes

For Big Libraries

Let me add one note for people with extensive Kindle libraries. When you click “Your Books,” you may find that you have too many to easily list there. In that case, you can use the search function. When you search, it appears that Amazon finds the printed edition of the book rather than the Kindle edition. This means that you will need to look to the sidebar where it says, “You have a different edition of this book.” Click “different edition” and you will be all set. Then carry on with the step above under the heading “Find Your Highlights.”

Edition

There are two great benefits to moving all your highlights to Evernote. The first benefit is searchability—your highlights and notes are now searchable in Evernote. When you search for a topic you may be surprised to learn that it was covered in a book you read; not only that, but Evernote retains the location information, so you can return to the exact spot and read the surrounding context. The second benefit is retention—you can return regularly and skim through your highlights to remind yourself of the book’s key points. This is an effective technique for retaining information and ideas.

So there you have it. Kindle + Evernote = ♥.

(Bonus Idea: If you have a membership at Books at a Glance, do the same thing with their book summaries–add them to Evernote!)


  • A La Carte Collection cover image

    A La Carte (April 23)

    A La Carte: Climate anxiety paralyzes, gospel hope propels / Living what God has written / How should I engage my rebellious child? / Satan hates your pastor / How to navigate our spiritual highs / The art of extemporaneous preaching / and more.

  • The Path to Contentment

    The Path to Contentment

    I wonder if you have ever considered that the solution to discontentment almost always seems to be more. If I only had more money I would be content. If I only had more followers, more possessions, more beauty, then at last I would consider myself successful. If only my house was bigger, my influence wider,…

  • A La Carte Collection cover image

    A La Carte (April 22)

    A La Carte: Why my shepherd carries a rod / When Mandisa forgave Simon Cowell / An open mind is like an open mouth / Marriage: the half-time report / The church should mind its spiritual business / Kindle deals / and more.

  • It Begins and Ends with Speaking

    It Begins and Ends with Speaking

    Part of the joy of reading biography is having the opportunity to learn about a person who lived before us. An exceptional biography makes us feel as if we have actually come to know its subject, so that we rejoice in that person’s triumphs, grieve over his failures, and weep at his death.

  • A La Carte Collection cover image

    Weekend A La Carte (April 20)

    A La Carte: Living counterculturally during election season / Borrowing a death / The many ministries of godly women / When we lose loved ones and have regrets / Ethnicity and race and the colorblindness question / The case for children’s worship services / and more.

  • The Anxious Generation

    The Great Rewiring of Childhood

    I know I’m getting old and all that, and I’m aware this means that I’ll be tempted to look unfavorably at people who are younger than myself. I know I’ll be tempted to consider what people were like when I was young and to stand in judgment of what people are like today. Yet even…