Kindle devices finally got a feature users have been wanting forever

Cover art of the book you're currently reading on lock screen — activated.
 By 
Stan Schroeder
 on 
Kindle devices finally got a feature users have been wanting forever
The feature is currently rolling out globally. Credit: shannon connellan / mashable

Amazon's Kindle devices are great e-book readers, there's not much arguing over that. But Amazon isn't the most agile company when it comes to introducing new software features to its Kindles.

One simple feature in particular has been high on users' wishlists for years: having the cover of a book you're currently reading on the device's lock screen. Until now, the display would show some automatically chosen wallpapers when the device was sleeping. There was a way to have the Kindle show the cover art of your current book, but it involved jailbreaking the Kindle (which some people actually did).

Now, according to GoodEReader, the feature has become available to Kindle e-readers running the latest firmware (5.13.5). The feature already started rolling out in India and Mexico, but Amazon has confirmed to the outlet that it will be available globally "in a couple of weeks." We've tried it on a device in the UK and the feature was there.


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It works! Credit: Shannon connellan / Mashable

To enable it, go to Settings - Device Options and switch on the "Display Cover" option.

Being able to see which book you're currently reading when your Kindle is asleep may sound like a tiny feature, but it's actually really natural — if for no other reason, then because it's similar to reading a physical book.

The feature will be available on the Kindle 8th gen and up, Kindle Paperwhite 7th gen and up, Kindle Oasis 8th gen and up, and Kindle Voyage's 7th gen. One caveat is that the Kindle has to be a no-ads variant for this feature to work, as those devices show advertisements on the display when it's asleep.

Stan Schroeder
Stan Schroeder
Senior Editor

Stan is a Senior Editor at Mashable, where he has worked since 2007. He's got more battery-powered gadgets and band t-shirts than you. He writes about the next groundbreaking thing. Typically, this is a phone, a coin, or a car. His ultimate goal is to know something about everything.

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