Expert's Rating
Pros
- Bright, even backlighting and high-res display make text easy to read
- Light weight and ergonomic design make it easy to use for hours at a time
- Automatically adapts to right and left-handed users
- Battery cover recharges onboard battery
Cons
- Not as comfortable to hold with battery cover attached
- Shorter battery life than older, less-expensive models
Our Verdict
It’s the best Kindle by far, but it’s not the best value in e-readers.
The base model of Amazon’s latest and best e-reader, the Kindle Oasis with Wi-Fi, costs $290. The Oasis version I tested, which supplements its Wi-Fi adapter with a 3G connection (so you can download e-books while on the go) and that doesn’t present you with “special offers” (Amazon’s euphemism for advertisements that appear on the Kindle’s lockscreen), sells for $380.
In a world where it’s possible to pick up a great little multi-function tablet like the 16GB Apple iPad Mini 2 with Wi-Fi and cellular for just $19 more—or for that matter, Amazon’s latest Kindle Paperwhite with 3G and without lockscreen ads for $170 less—convincing anyone that a one-trick pony like the Oasis is a smart buy is a tough sell.
But if you must have the best, and price is no object, it’s equally tough to argue that there is any e-reader on the market that’s superior to the Kindle Oasis.

While Both the Oasis and the Paperwhite have identical display sizes, their overall footprints and weight are significantly different.
Smaller, lighter, and brighter
The first thing long-time Kindle users will notice about the Oasis is its size: Measuring 5.6 x 4.8 x 0.13 inches and weighing a mere 4.7 ounces, the Oasis is the thinnest, lightest Kindle that Amazon has ever built. It’s nearly two ounces lighter than a similarly outfitted Kindle Voyage ($290), and it weights almost three ounces less than the current-generation Kindle Paperwhite.
Like its chunkier cousins, the Oasis comes equipped with a six-inch, anti-glare, 300 ppi display. With the backlight turned off, I didn’t notice a difference between reading on my 2014 Paperwhite and the Oasis. But with the backlights turned up, it’s a very different story. The Oasis employs 10 LEDs to ensure even backlighting across its display, beating out the patchier light the Paperwhite’s four LEDs produce. This isn’t to say that the Paperwhite is a horror to read on—I’ve been satisfied with mine for years. The Oasis’ display backlighting is simply better.
The Oasis’ light weight and superior backlighting come at a cost, however; it has a significantly shorter battery life than its recent predecessors. Where a Kindle Paperwhite can potentially go for months between charges, the Oasis’ internal battery can manage only about two weeks of use, depending on your reading habits.
To boost the Oasis’ run time, Amazon baked a second battery into its leather cover, which is included (you can choose from chestnut brown, black, or red. Covers cost extra on other Kindle models.) The cover starts charging the Oasis’ internal battery as soon as it’s magnetically mated to the e-reader’s asymmetrical chassis. Amazon claims that between the Oasis’ two batteries, it’s possible to wring eight weeks of use out of the device, provided you keep your reading to 30 minutes per day and keep the screen lighting turned down to a reasonable level. On average, I read a few hours per day. As such, a month into my using the Oasis, I’ve already had to charge it once.

The more abuse the Oasis’ leather battery cover takes, the better it looks.
The edge of the Oasis that the battery cover connects to serves as a housing for the e-reader’s battery; as such, it is wider and deeper than the rest of the device. Why jam the battery into one end of the thing instead of spreading it out flat like you see with other Kindles or tablets? Because doing so allows for a couple of awesome features. First, when the Oasis, is removed from its cover, its battery bump makes a great handle for one-handed reading.
Second, the shape and width of the bump is such that when you hold it, your thumb naturally rests on the wide bezel just to the side of the Oasis’ display. It’s the ideal location to place a pair of page-turn buttons, so that’s exactly what Amazon did.
Lump all of this together and you get a lightweight e-reader that you can comfortably hold and turn the pages of the book you’re reading with one hand. And thanks to a built-in accelerometer, the Oasis can be used by left- or right-handed individuals without compromise. Simply flip the Oasis over and the text on its display and page-turn buttons will adjust to the device’s new orientation. Hate buttons? No problem, the Oasis can also be controlled via its touchscreen.

Buttons on the bezel let you move backward or forward through a book.
Limitations
So, that’s the fancy. Let’s talk about the plain.
The Oasis uses the same operating system as Amazon’s other Kindle e-readers do: if you’ve used a Kindle in the past, you’ll find no surprises here. It has the same amount of internal storage as the Paperwhite and Voyage. Despite having 1GB of RAM—twice that of a current generation Kindle Paperwhite—I didn’t notice a huge improvement in performance.
None of its shortcomings are terrible, but you’d like to think that with it’s costing $170 more than the latest iteration of the 3G-equipped Paperwhite ($100 more than the 3G Voyage), there’d be a significant boost in performance. There isn’t.
Bottom line
With similar performance to other e-readers that cost much less, we can’t recommend Amazon’s Kindle Oasis to everyone. But for voracious readers with a taste for luxury, this e-reader’s light weight, excellent ergonomics, and even backlighting are worth the premium.
Note: A version of this review was published earlier on Macworld.