ItalianBaptist
Since: Jan, 2014
KnightofLsama
Since: Sep, 2010
#3: Mar 17th 2014 at 3:49:52 PM
You can also put fanfics in general on your kindle if you're willing to fiddle around a bit to convert them to mobi format.
There are sites like this one
to do the actual conversion once you've got them in something as simple as a .doc document.
Swanpride
Since: Jun, 2013
BlueNinja0
The Mod with the Migraine
from Taking a left at Albuquerque
Since: Dec, 2010
Relationship Status: Showing feelings of an almost human nature
#5: Mar 20th 2014 at 10:45:38 AM
Did newer kindles stop reading standard pdf files? Because my old Sony reader, I used to read quite a bit on there that I'd copy/paste into Word note and convert to pdf for reading. Worked especially well if I adjusted the mage size.
That’s the epitome of privilege right there, not considering armed nazis a threat to your life. - Silasw
Swanpride
Since: Jun, 2013
Total posts: 6

So, I gained a Kindle this Christmas and decided to play around with it and then I typed "fanfiction" and waited for the results.
It actually returned 63 results. Let me share a few that I found amusing (I mean, judging by descriptions):
- On the Trail of Snowden. Snowden fan fiction in which a spy searchs for Edward Snowden in Moscow's airport. 14 pages and it costs R$ 2.26, or more or less one dollar.
- The Legend of Zelda: Forgotten Goddess. Obvious fanfic, it costs R$400 (or 176 dollars) but we have a discount of 100%, 324 pages.
- iCarly & Co.. Contains curtain fics and costs more or less 2.50 dollars. It has "invented other episodes" and drabbles for other series and an original story.
There are also false positives, a good number of German fanfics, rule 34 of Pride And Prejudice, manuals on how to write fanfic and actually serious studies on fanfic. What do you think of that? I mean, are these allowed? Or will they start a new trend?
edited 22nd Dec '13 6:49:09 PM by RN452
My work is here. Current main fic: Tengen Toppa Gurren Solvernia