How to Get Your Kindle Highlights into Evernote

When I read anything, I mark it up. Margin notes, circles, and, most of all, highlights. In fact, I buy highlighters by the box. Or at least I did, until I started reading so much on my Kindle.

Amazon Kindle for Mac

Amazon Kindle for Mac, Displaying Do the Work by Steven Pressfield

Now I use the Highlighter feature of the Kindle to mark passages. I also occasionally use the Notes feature to record my thoughts about a passage. (This is actually pretty cumbersome on the Kindle itself. I usually only do this if I am reading on my Mac. Then I can use my keyboard.)

I only wish that I could store all these notes and highlights in Evernote, which has become my digital brain. Well, now you can! It’s easier than you think. Just follow these eight steps:

If you are just getting started with Evernote, I suggest that you buy Brett Kelly’s remarkably practical e-book, Evernote Essentials, Second Edition. It is worth setting aside a couple hours to work through this brief, 95-page book. It will save you DAYS of learning Evernote on your own.
  1. Create your highlights as usual. This feature is different on each device. I find it easiest on Kindle for Mac or my iPhone.
  2. Log into your unique Amazon Kindle page. Who knew you even had a unique Kindle page? It contains a list of all your books, with links to the notes and highlights. You can even record your progress then rate the book. Your main page will look similar to this:

    Amazon Kindle Login Page

  3. Click on Your Books. This is at the top of your Kindle page. Choose this option instead of Your Highlights. It will narrow the display to notes and highlights for a specific book, once you select one. You should now see a page similar to this:

    Amazon Kindle Book List

  4. Select the appropriate book. You can either search for it in the search bar at the top of the page or scroll down your list of books. Once you select a book, you will get a page that looks similar to this:

    Amazon Kindle Book Page

  5. Click on the Evernote Web Clipper icon on your browser’s toolbar. Note: if you haven’t done this previously—and you really should—you can find the appropriate one for your browser here. On Google Chrome, the web clipper looks like this:

    Kindle to evernote 05

  6. Select the appropriate notebook and tags. This is optional, of course. However, I store my Kindle notes and highlights in my Reference notebook. I use the booknotes tag. Keep in mind that Evernote automatically indexes every word in the note, so you don’t have to repeat key words as tags. Now select Clip full page.
  7. Go to Evernote and make sure the new note is there. You might need to sync first. You can now add additional notes or delete unwanted material. For example, I delete the section called “Posts from this Book.”

    Amazon Kindle Notes and Highlights Page in Evernote

  8. Copy and paste your highlights to other applications as needed. I often use highlighted passages in blog posts, Keynote slides, speaking notes, or manuscripts. Anything is possible.

If you are disciplined about this, you can have near-instant access to all your book notes and highlights in Evernote. It really takes very little effort once you get the hang of it.

Question: What will you do with your Kindle notes and highlights once you get them into Evernote? You can leave a comment by clicking here.
Disclosure of Material Connection: Some of the links in the post above are “affiliate links.” This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. Regardless, I only recommend products or services I use personally and believe will add value to my readers. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255: “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”

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  • http://www.shopmychurch.com Jason Stambaugh

    What won’t I do? Seriously thanks for the tip. Evernote has become a lifeline. 

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Yes, it’s one of those apps that seems to get richer the more I use it.

      • Anonymous

        I agree, I am learning to use if for more and more. I just have to put down the cash to get the Essentials and put it to use.

        • http://www.jeffrandleman.com Jeff Randleman

          Completely worth the purchase price!

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      Jason,

      You are exactly right. It is awesome.

      JIm

  • Ron Lane

    I don’t have a kindle, but this has me curious if I can do the something similar with Nook and iBooks.  I will have to check this out because it is great.

    Are you manually putting in books that you read that are actual paper books?

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      I don’t know about Nook. But, yes, I manually put in some quotes from physical books, but it is SO much hassle.

      • Anonymous

        Thanks Michael. I will have to check on it. That will make things a lot easier.

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      Ron,

      I use to pay a person a lot of money to do this for me. This process rocks and it is free.

      Jim

    • web2write

      You can highlight quotes in kindle ebooks also with every kindle-APP, you dont need a kindle reader :-)

      I read all my kindle-books on ipad and Mac!
      I export all of my highlight ti readmill as described obove.
      You can find my (particulary exported hightlights form kindle-books here:http://readmill.com/web2write

  • http://twitter.com/lagestee Len Lagestee

    Awesome tip…copy, paste, and re-format was getting old!  Thanks!

  • Bill Simmons

    Very helpful. My only problem is that I have not been able to get the evernote web clip on safari on my iPad. I’ve searched ever notes support. Any suggestions?

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      I don’t have any suggestions, other than to check the Evernote user forum.

    • Anonymous

      Bill there is an app for that!!! I just got an iPad this week and was wondering how to do it. Go to the app store & It is called MemClip It works great. You just follow the instructions on how to install & it works great! I just used it a few minutes ago!!!

      Mr. Hyatt – you may need to hire me as your app guru! This would be the 2nd time I knew something about Evernote that you did not. ;)

      • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

        Thanks for chiming in. I don’t have an iPad, so I am at a loss.

  • http://profiles.google.com/pastorbradgilbert Pastor Brad Gilbert

    Wow, thanks. I am just now getting used to incorporating Evernote and this will be a BIG help in sermon prep.

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Great! I am using it for speaker prep, too.

  • http://wwww.wordpress.RichardBurkey.com Richard Burkey

    Thank you! Thank you! Thank you! John Maxwell taught over me 20 years ago to file away illustrations, quotes, and ideas. Evernote made that possible digitally, and even more readily accessible then the 7 file cabinets of materials I have collected. 

    Last year I picked up a Kindle for ease of reading when I travel, but my frustration was how to get the illustrations, quotes and ideas into my filing system. You solved the mystery. Thanks so much!

    • Joe Lalonde

      Richard, I’m trying to get into the habit of filing away illustrations, quotes, and ideas from books. However, it’s been difficult doing it consistently. Do you have any tips or suggestions on how to do this better

      • http://www.wordpress.RichardBurkey.com Richard Burkey

        I never read a book unless I have some  3×5 cards as bookmarkers, I use 1 to note illustrations/quotes to copy. (Others are used to jot down ideas and action steps to take.) I title the illustration, mark it. When I am done reading I hand the book to my administrative assistant and volunteers she gets to copy and files them. The advantage of the “prep” work already done when speaking on a topic, and grabbing a folder loaded with information has kept me motivated to develop this habit.

        The advantage of Evernote is it makes it easier to put in multiple topic areas. Webclib also has made it easier to mark and copy great blog stuff. Adding this to Kindle will be a great help. Hope that helps.

        • Joe Lalonde

          Richard, thanks for answering my question. I appreciate you taking the time to do that.

          I really like your idea of 3X5 cards as bookmarks. Currently, I just grab anything that is close by and use those as a bookmark. I think that will be changing and I’ll switch to something like the 3X5 cards.

          • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

            Joe,

            you have to use the same system. Mike told us about the journals and scanning them it. It works well also.

            Jim

          • Joe Lalonde

            Jim, I’m not using Evernote yet. So it would just be me taking notes and filing them away. Most likely I would also type them into a word document.

        • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

          I do the same thing, it works well.

        • http://www.jeffrandleman.com Jeff Randleman

          Great ideas!  Mine are similar:  I use a series of about four shapes that I make note with in the margins.  A Star for important passages, A checkbox for quotes, etc.  Then I use the extra page at the front or the pages at the back to note page numbers of the information that needs to make it into my files (read Evernote).  In a sense, I’ve created my own little user-index of the material that stood out to me, and it stayes with the book.  I found that I tend to lose things like 3×5 cards…

      • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

        Joe,

        it has to be a habit. Make it a habit, you will not regret it.

        Jim

        • Joe Lalonde

          Thanks Jim. It is something I’m working on. One other problem I’m having with taking notes is that it slows down my reading and breaks my concentration. I’m not liking that but I do think it is good to make notes on what I’m reading.

          • http://www.jeffrandleman.com Jeff Randleman

            I used to be the same way, but now I find that taking notes actually increases my concentration, because I’m more engaged with what I’m reading.

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      Richard,

      I feel the same way, what  a great tool to use and to help us organize. Plus it keeps things right in front of you.

      Jim

  • http://www.warriorshepherd.com/blog Dave Hearn

    When I saw the title of your post, I was really hoping it was an easier process.  I love my Kindle, but I am looking forward to the next version and some improvements (one of which being Evernote integration)

    But still, I had no idea I could access my books and notes this way.  Thanks for that info.

    To answer your question, I’m using my Kindle notes to write my ebook.  

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      It reality is easy once you have done it once. Just make it part of your workflow. Finish the book, then take 60 seconds to do this.

  • http://davidsantistevan.com David Santistevan

    Excellent. Never thought to do this. Accessing my highlights and notes has been my biggest frustration with the Kindle – I resist it for some reason. This will help me tremendously.
    Do you read more on the Kindle, Kindle for Mac, or Kindle for iPhone?

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Mostly on the Kindle itself.

    • http://brevis.me Robert Ewoldt

      I read mostly on the Kindle itself.

    • http://stevencribbs.com Steven Cribbs

      I decided to go the route of an iPad and have enjoyed the Kindle App greatly – moreso than reading on the computer or iPhone.

      • http://www.jeffrandleman.com Jeff Randleman

        I haven’t really used it on the iPad yet, mainly since I own a Kindle…

    • Joe Lalonde

      I’m with Steven and also use an iPad for reading Kindle material. It’s nice as I can also use it to read Nook, iBook, and other forms of eBooks.

      • http://davidsantistevan.com David Santistevan

        Joe, what is your reasoning for reading all different forms of ebooks? To me that seems unnecessary due to the fact that amazon has the greatest selection. What do you think?

        • Joe Lalonde

          David,

          I agree that Amazon has a great selection of books. And I think it’s one of the best eBook apps for the iPad.

          My reason behind using different formats is fairly silly, but practical. I’ve found different books for free on different formats. If I want to read those books, I need to have the app.

          • http://brevis.me Robert Ewoldt

            I think, eventually, the e-book formats will be consolidated. Right now, we’re in a period of determining which products will survive. After that, then the formats will be narrowed down.

      • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

        I agree, the pad is easy to use also.

        Jim

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      I use the kindle also………….great tool and you can do this with ease. I just transferred all of my books in a few minutes.

      JIm

  • http://emuelle1.blogspot.com Eric S. Mueller

    That’s brilliant. Thank you.

    I’ve been using Evernote since Version 1, and I’ve never hit a limit for what can be done with it.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Katherine-Harms/602268732 Katherine Harms

    I have never used Evernote, but I use my notes and highlights all the time. I use the USB cable and copy my notes to my computer. Then I do whatever I want. I have pulled out quotations for teaching aids. I suppose I should find printer paper like labels the size of 3×5 cards, but lacking that item, I simply set up a printing format the size of 3×5 cards on 8 1/2 X 11 paper and cut it apart. I hand out quotations to groups of people in a class and use them to spark discussion.
    I also use my quotations in blogs and blog comments.
    The keyboard on the Kindle is quite small, but when I am reading, I am always in coversations with the author, and I comment constantly. After I read a book, I pull those comments into a file on my computer where I can mine the notes for both quotations and comments. I use them in articles, blogs, blog comments and even book manuscripts. When I quote from a Kindle book, I use the Kindle location in place of a page number.

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      Katherine, I think you will find that Evernote is the best tool. Look at Mikes previous posts on how to set it up with files. It works well.

      Jim

  • http://Busyness.com Dr. Brad Semp

    Now this is something I hadn’t even considered, Mike.  :)  Thanks for sharing – great tip!

  • http://twitter.com/lukedsimmons Luke Simmons

    Thanks Michael. The only drawback that some may want to be aware of is that some books have a “Clipping Limit,” which means not all the highlights appear on your page. Amazon describes it this way: 
    For some books the publisher allows only a limited percentage of a book to be “clipped” and stored separately from the main body of the book, as normally happens when you add a highlight. If you exceed this limit then you will see fewer highlights on this website than you actually marked on your Kindle. Popular Highlights are not counted towards this clipping limit.

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      I have only run into that once, but I tend to be a “judicious clipper.”

      • Michael Borgstede

        What I have also found is some books allow highlighting on my iPhone app but then do not come up on my Kindle page until I select “All Books” – which includes books I have purchased and wish list books (long list). Then when I go to the specific book nothing comes up of my highlights and there is no overall record in the upper right like in other books. But there is a small list of popular highlights. This seems strange to me. 

        Anyway – this means I can’t clip to Evernote by this method. Will contact support at Amazon to see why.

        • Anonymous

          Michael, I’m having the same problem … if you figure out a solution, please post it!

          • Michael Borgstede

            Figured out that you have to have the “Popular Highlights” turned on under Settings (I am using iPhone version) to sync all notes and highlights with Amazon’s website. So now I have my notes and everyone else’s. Glad it is working but maybe Amazon should create a few choices for this like, “Sync only personal annotations” “See all annotations” etc.

          • Anonymous

            Weird … because I already have “popular highlights” turned on, and yet I still don’t see my own highlights synced on Amazon’s page. Gotta figure this out because I LOVE the idea of this tip.

          • http://twitter.com/AnneMateer Anne Mateer

            Me, either. I wish I knew what I was doing wrong!

          • Reinhardt Haukenfrers

            ditto, also can’t grab highlights, only popular highlights show up when I search for a book I read and highlighted.

          • Gregor H.

            Having the same issue, so I contacted Amazon CS and they told me that:

            Bookmarks, highlights, notes, and clippings you make within a Kindle book are stored in your Kindle library on Amazon.com and can be viewed at http://kindle.amazon.com. The storage space provided for every customer is limited.

            In this case I see that you’re account reached the maximum annotations storage limit. I suggest you to remove some of the annotations or highlights, so that you can save highlights in future.

            Not very transparent by Amazon, I have to say…

          • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

            I don’t think the total amount of storage is limited but the amount of highlights per book is limited. This has to do with the publishers restrictions. They don’t want people highlighting the whole book and, in essence, getting all the text in a form they can duplicate. This was what I was told by another Amazon rep. I am a big highlighter, and it has only happened to me on one book.

          • Michael Borgstede

            This also repopulated my Kindle book list. So turning on “Popular Highlights” is actually a little misleading – it is actually making your Kindle software sync-able with the Amazon site (meaning is does more than just turn on “Popular Highlights”). Turned off there is no sync happening other than a new purchase of a book.

  • http://successbeginstoday.org/wordpress John Richardson

    Wow Mike, while this is a great way to get highlights and notes into Evernote, it’s also a great way to cut and paste quotations into a blog post and find other people by their Twitter names who have commented on the book. This is a HUGE time saver. Since you can’t cut and paste directly from the Kindle app, this is actually better. You just highlight as you read, and then go to your own Kindle page to summarize and write a review. This will be very helpful to all of your BookSneeze readers who need to write a book review. Thanks for saving me hours of time rewriting quotations!!!

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      You are welcome, John!

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      John,

      Great Idea. That will save a lot of time.

      JIm

  • http://jeremysconfessions.com Jeremy Statton

    Thanks for sharing this. I had not thought of using the clipper on the kindle site. I am still hoping that eventually Amazon will make it easier for you to import your highlights.

  • Sandy

    Great!  I just finished my last residency for my MA in Leadership.  I will use this for research for my final paper.  I’ve recently purchased an iPad and will be using evernote to record interviews etc.  Keep these tips coming! 

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      Yes, just make sure you have the correct page numbers for your references.

      Jim

  • http://www.jeubfamily.com Chris Jeub

    I started Evernote two weeks ago, largely because of your enthusiasm for it. I was previously using Google Docs as my in-the-cloud note-taking app. So far, I’m loving Evernote, and I can see why you are so enthusiastic about it. Perfect for my busy workflow. Once my busy season is over (end of summer), I’m going to take on a paperless life. Thanks Michael!

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Great! I am glad it is working out for you.

  • http://brevis.me Robert Ewoldt

    Michael, this will be a HUGE help for me!  I had no idea that I could do this.  I use book quotes all the time in my posts, so this will be a huge time-saver.  Thanks.

  • http://www.forward-living.com W. Mark Thompson

    Interesting. So much versatile technology working together. I’m still in the Evernote Essentials stage. Printed it the other day and working through it. But I’m keeping this wealth of information handy for the future. Thanks for sharing!

  • http://www.jdeddins.com JD Eddins

    WOW! Thanks forr sharing this.  I love using my Kindle and have only used Evernote a few times, but know this will get me into using it much more often.

  • http://twitter.com/joeholland Joe Holland

    Up until now I’ve been getting my quotes into Evernote by transferring the My Clippings text file from my Kindle to my Macbook by USB sync.  I copy the file and then delete the contents on my Kindle to avoid duplicates later.  Once on my Macbook the file goes straight into Evernote.  Because Evernote’s ninja search capabilities I don’t even have to break up the long text file.  I may try this technique to see if it speeds up the process.  Thanks.

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      This will definitely speed up the process. I have done it both ways. Thanks.

  • http://www.touchtheskye.org Chris MacKinnon

    Another item to take out of the Word docs. Thanks for passing this along. I really like how you select them in each individual book. One of my few complaints about the Clippings feature on the Kindle is that it jumbles everything together. Very helpful, thanks.

  • http://www.thinveil.net Brandon Vogt

    I wonder, though, if anyone has figured out how to move highlights from non-native Kindle eBooks into Evernote.

    I read a number of galley copies which are often sent in PDF form, which I then convert to “.mobi” using the Calibre software. I transfer the book to my Kindle and, though the formatting is often skewed, I can still read it, highlight it, and take notes.

    However the personal Amazon Kindle page seems to only track highlights you’ve made on books you’ve purchased through Amazon…..

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      Yes, that incorrect … unfortunately.

      • James Taylor

        But you can get your hands on your highlights from non-amazon books by plugging your kindle into your computer and copying across your clippings file (a .txt file I believe). Then you can copy and paste your clippings from non-amazon books directly into Evernote from there.

        • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

          Yes, that is true. It’s just more work.

    • http://brevis.me Robert Ewoldt

      Hmmm… that will probably be a snag for me, too. I have a bunch of books on my Kindle that I didn’t purchase through Amazon.

  • Andrea

    Oh my! Just last night I was struggling to do just this. I was on my iPad and tried to figure out a way to email or copy and past into Evernote. I finally gave up. Tonight I’ll have to go back to the passage I wanted to mark up and send it on to Evernote!

    I’ve been trying to move more and more of what I do to Evernote, By day, I’m a SAP Technical Trainer/Instructional Developer and my life is documents, writing, and keeping up on the latest and greatest technology/learning theory.

    By night, I’m the Fiberguru, and I’m working of blog posts, new designs, and the classes I’m developing. So once again, I live in Evernote at night as well.

    Now here’s a question for all of you…

    How do you mark up your PDFs and then get them into Evernote? Via Computer, Tablet (in my case iPad), or Smartphone?

    Cheers,

    andrea

  • Reid Matthews

    Thank you, Michael.  I will start using this today.

  • Joe Lalonde

    It’s amazing what can be done now with Evernote and other applications. Thanks for sharing this great tip.

  • http://justinwoulard.com Justin Woulard

    This one tip will probably move me to reading mostly on my kindle.

  • http://twitter.com/AnneMateer Anne Mateer

    I am so interested in making this work, but I must have a setting wrong somewhere because the things I highlighted on my kindle device don’t show up under “my highlights” on my unique kindle page (which I am now glad I know is there!). Anyone know what might fix this?

  • http://somewiseguy.com ThatGuyKC

    I love the Highlight feature on the Kindle, but you’re right about the notes. It’s a little dodgy on the device itself.

    Thank you for the continued Evernote tips. I’m on the verge of buying the book now. :)

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  • Anonymous

    This doesn’t get the clip from the book in, but it does clip the link directly into Evernote as well as the note:

    Link your Evernote account to Twitter. When you’ve got a highlight and a comment, have your Kindle share it with Twitter using the direct message to myEN. This creates a note in my “Inbox” notebook on Evernote.

    This works with my flow, because then I go into Evernote and process through any emailed-in or twittered-in notes and my Kindle notes are there to process as well. The link that’s in the message opens the same website you’re referring to, and I can copy or discard the notes. Just another direction to work through the system.

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      Yes,

      that is correct.

      Jim

    • http://brevis.me Robert Ewoldt

      Interesting idea…

  • Rusty Castleman

    You mentioned “Read This Before Our Next Meeting”…. the Kindle edition is actually FREE right now at Amazon for a limited time. I subscribe to Michael Gallagher’s blog (auto delivered daily to my Kindle for $0.99/mth) and he highlighted this book yesterday. In the past year I’ve downloaded almost 400 free non-fiction books I’ve learned about on his blog. “Do The Work” was also one of them. If you have a Kimdle, check out his blog.

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      Thank you. I just got it.

      Jim

  • http://twitter.com/drpoulette Dennis Poulette

    Wow. This makes citing for papers so much easier. I just wish it included the page number instead of the location number. (Maybe it does and I didn’t see it).

    • http://lifeallin.ent Jacob Musselman

      I completely agree! I’ve noticed some of my books list a page number when I read on my iPhone. But since I’ve started doing a lot of my school reading on the Kindle not having page numbers bums me out sometimes.

    • Anonymous

      Someday, Turabian/MLA/APA and the great citation gurus will catch up and allow us cite digital locations alongside citing a digital edition. After all, if you’re going to check a quote on a Kindle, you can find it just as well with a location number as with a page number.

  • http://cindygraves.wordpress.com/ Cindy

    Thank You!!!! I finally got this to work (after 3 hours). Once my Kindle, my Amazon page/account and I all got on the same page it was a breeze! You have saved me many headaches and much frustration. So thankful for your wisdom and helpful hints.

    • Anonymous

      Cindy, can you explain HOW you got it to work? I’m guessing I am having the same issues you may have had.

  • Guest

    Thanks!

  • http://blog.fuzzboard.com Christion

    Wow, Evernote is amazing… and I had no clue I had a Kindle page. Thanks!

  • http://stevencribbs.com Steven Cribbs

    I use highlights and quotes for blogging and teaching.  And, I have been frustrated in the process of getting highlights from my Kindle App into Evernote and other processes.

    I had resigned myself to thinking I would just have to retype any quote that I wanted to use – dreading (or should I say avoiding) the longer quotes.  Thanks for showing me that capturing highlighs can be done.

    This just brightened my day.

    • http://www.jeffrandleman.com Jeff Randleman

      I can so relate…

  • http://www.jasonvana.com Jason Vana

    Great resource and instructions, Michael! Thanks for this.

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  • http://www.inspirationtochange.org Karen Zeigler

    I love my Kindle and Evernote is fast becoming a favorite app.  Thanks so much for the post.  I think I can spend most of the afternoon reading this and your related evernote posts!  And thanks for the tip on the e-book.  Good stuff!

  • http://twitter.com/KLOlund Kyle L. Olund

    Very cool, Mike. I’m just beginning to scratch the surface of Evernote’s capabilities. So far I love it, especially now that I can upload notes I write in my LiveScribe notebook into my Evernote account. I did notice on one of my Kindle books, though, that there is a restriction to the amount of text clipped. On my Amazon Kindle page, I read: 

    “For some books the publisher allows only a limited percentage of a book to be “clipped” and stored separately from the main body of the book, as normally happens when you add a highlight. If you exceed this limit then you will see fewer highlights on this website than you actually marked on your Kindle. Popular Highlights are not counted towards this clipping limit.”

  • James Derflinger

    Great post thanks.  Always learning so much from you.

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  • http://twitter.com/aleelee aleelee

    Thank You!  I have been looking for a way to do this.  

  • http://twitter.com/CoachTheresaIF Theresa Ip Froehlich

    For 2 years, I’ve been trying to convince my husband I need a Kindle. No success yet. Michael, this feature you just shared is my dream come true. Perhaps if I tell my husband Michael Hyatt uses Kindle and Evernote, it will help. :)

    • http://michaelhyatt.com Michael Hyatt

      It’s worth a try!

    • http://brevis.me Robert Ewoldt

      The Kindle is definitely worth the cost… I’ve converted over to reading most of my books on my Kindle. I can take a huge number of books with me wherever I go.

  • http://www.michaelhsmith.com Michael H Smith

    This is great…I knew there had to be a way and so glad you did the leg work and shared the knowledge.

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  • http://financialplanningapprentice.com Robinson Mertilus

    I use both evernote and the kindle. This will come in handy. I have already gone in to added the evernote plugin and saved my kindle notes. Love it! Thanks.

  • http://twitter.com/JesseLahey Jesse Lahey

    I have been using Evernotes for over a year. I probably should have bought Evernote Essentials a long time ago; I finally bought it a month ago and read the whole thing, but I don’t feel like I learned much that I didn’t already know.

    However, I just got a Kindle this month, so this tip to get my Kindle highlights into Evernote is most helpful — thanks!

    BTW, I tried the new Nook Simple Touch first, and though I loved the intuitive touch screen, the overall experience just was sub-par compare to the Kindle … so I returned the Nook at the end of 15 days. The Barns & Noble website falls way behind Amazon’s … searches were very clunky, the website experience was not well intergrated with the Nook (for example, the wish lists on the website were not synced with the Nook device, and searches for free books brought up mostly erotic novels with no obvious way to exclude them from future searches). Plus, the Kindle has a 30-day return policy, so I don’t feel as rush to make a decision on whether to keep it. And one more thing … I love the lighted cover, though it seems over-priced.

    • http://twitter.com/jmhardy98 Jim Hardy

      The kindle is awesome, but I do believe that they are coming out with a new one soon.

      JIm

    • http://brevis.me Robert Ewoldt

      I love the lighted cover on my Kindle, too.

  • dscheidemantle

    Here’s another fast way if you have a PC.  Install Kindle for PC and also install a free program called  “Click.It” (from the Evernote Trunk).  Then just select the text from Kindle for PC that you want in Evernote, type control + c, and click the Evernote icon. 

  • Pingback: The Kindle Chronicles - TKC 159 Dave Limp

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