These Refurbished Kindles Are up to 25% Off Right Now

With Amazon’s “October Prime Day” sale set to start Oct. 8, many Amazon devices have been on sale with early deals. Two of those deals are particularly great for Kindle fans: The refurbished Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition and Kindle Scribe are available on Amazon for $134.99 (originally $169.99) and $233.99 (originally $309.99) respectively. These refurbished Kindles don’t go on sale very often and are cheaper than their new counterparts have ever been.

Discounted refurbished Kindles are kind of a hot commodity and sell out fairly quickly. Other than buying them used from sites like eBay, it’s the best moment to buy them for much cheaper than getting them new. Amazon’s refurbished program tests them and replaces any defective parts.

The Kindle Paperwhite Signature Edition is essentially the same as the Kindle Paperwhite but with twice the storage (32 GB), an auto-adjusting light feature that automatically adjusts the screen brightness depending on how bright (or dark) your surroundings are, and wireless charging. At $134.99 for the Signature Edition, it is the same price as the regular Kindle Paperwhite, making it a great deal.

The Amazon Kindle Scribe is $339.99 new, and the lowest it has dropped before is $239.99 during the summer. If you trust Amazon’s refurbished program, you can snag one right now for a couple of dollars cheaper. The Scribe is one of the best e-readers you can buy and you likely won’t see it come down to this price on the upcoming sales.

Four of My Favorite Products for Home Organizing

Every few months, I go through a phase in which I decide I’m going to organize my home even better than I did the last few times this spirit overtook me. For me, this usually involves snooping around online, seeing what magical products are available to fix my entire life, and buying them on the spot. The truth is, there are a lot of organizational tools out there for every room and need—but some are better than others. Of course, that’s subjective, but as someone who has bought so many of these shelves, storage containers, and random organizers, I want to share the ones that have made the biggest difference for me.

Big, open shelves

I am a big believer in the concept of “storage as decoration,” which is party by necessity (I live in a small space) and partly by vanity (I have a nice things and they deserve to be out in the open). I’m also the kind of person whose object permanence is a little shaky, at least when it comes to what I own. If my accessories, clothes, tools, or whatever else aren’t at least a little visible, I can forget I have them.

One of the smartest things I did two years ago was pick up some big shelves for my living room area. Keeping everything in containers that are hidden away is great for a decluttered look, but for me, having my possessions well-organized and within reach is better for functionality. I am a stickler about my decorating and color scheme, so I got these pink ones:

By sticking with the color scheme I like, I trick myself into using the products more often. I have noticed that when I had shelving units that I bought just because they were cheap but they didn’t match my decor, I didn’t use them as much. Some people—my mother—would say that is ridiculous, but the first step to organizing is actually figuring out how you can maximize the use of your stuff by attuning your strategy to your personality. I am not always a practical, pragmatic person. I’m dedicated to whimsy and quick hits of joy. When I stopped fighting to turn myself into someone more rigid and embraced that about myself, everything got easier. Pink shelves it is.

Cube shelving everywhere else

I’ve mentioned this before, but cube shelves are an absolute necessity for me. For the most part, I do try to stick with organizational principles that say similar items must be stored together and should each have a designated spot, so having shelving units that are divided up makes it easier to hyper-categorize things. It also helps me declutter, since I know there is just one small cube’s worth of space for each category, so I have to be discerning about what I keep and buy.

I have cube shelving in my closet, underneath where my dresses and jumpsuits hang, to make the most of all the empty space. I also have a row in my kitchen, which helps me keep utensils and tools in order (and gives me a little extra workspace along the top). You can get a 12-cuber for $39.99, but mess around with the configurations to figure out which amount is right for you.

A free-standing clothing rack

Try as I might, I can’t fit all my clothes into my closet—at least not in a way that keeps them wrinkle-free or organized in any meaningful sense. A year ago, I just gave up and ordered a clothing rack. Again, this sets me up for a “storage as decoration” approach, so I wanted to make sure it was nice enough to be out in the open. I got a beautiful gold one on which I keep my nicest dresses and my coats, freeing up space in the closet and displaying a bit of finery (or at least that’s what I tell myself).

This has been a lifesaver for me because big dresses take up so much closet space and squishing them in is a terrible idea if I want them to look nice when it comes time to wear them. The gold tone is pretty, not tacky like the standard-issue silver one I used to have in my old apartment, and the built-in shelf is perfect for shoes that don’t necessarily fit anywhere else, like over-the-knee boots.

A shoe tree

I recommend over-the-door shoe racks a lot and I do stand by that recommendation because making use of the wasted space behind the door of your closet is a smart organizational choice. You can put all kinds of things in those, too, like belts, scarves, gloves, and other tiny accessories. Still, I love—love—my shoe tree because it holds so many more shoes than an over-door rack and takes up such little space.

Right now, the one I got is under $40 for a rack that holds 24 pairs of shoes vertically. It spins, so I can easily access the ones in the back, and it holds them upside down so they maintain their structure. I put all my nice shoes on here and stick my everyday ones in the pocketed over-door holders. This was my first major purchase when I first moved into my own apartment and this thing has lasted for six years and been consistently helpful ever since.

How to Set Up Your Bedroom Like a Hotel Room (and Why You Should)

If you think you sleep better in a hotel room than at home, you’re not alone: According to one survey, about 73% of people surveyed reported better sleep when they crash in a hotel. While some of that might be exhaustion from travel or being away from stress factors, there’s something else going on here: Hotels have designed their rooms to be as sleep-friendly as possible. Some hotels even lean into this phenomenon, marketing “sleep retreats” and offering amenities like pillow menus. There are several reasons you might want your home to emulate the look and feel of a high-end hotel, but if sleep is your enemy, you can one more to the list: Setting up your bedroom like a hotel room can lead to better sleep.

Choose quality bedding

This is pretty obvious: Even mid-tier hotels offer luxurious mattresses, pillows, and linens that make crawling under the covers a comforting, pleasurable experience that scratchy old sheets and a mattress you’ve moved through six apartments will never replicate.

If you have an existential sleeping experience in a specific hotel, you might be able to buy their bedding directly from them to get the same experience at home. You can also make a note of the bedding and research whether you can buy it directly somewhere (my wife and I once simply asked a hotel what kind of sheets they used, then found them online).

But just by upgrading your mattress, sheets, and pillows, you’ll give yourself a sleeping experience closer to hotel living.

Make the room darker

Hotel rooms, you may have noticed, tend to be dim: Even when you turn on every light in the room it’s all warm, low-level light. There are usually heavy blackout curtains on the windows, too. The combined effect is a cocoon of soothing, warm light that transforms into an enveloping darkness with the touch of a button. Put simply, darker environments equal better sleep.

Adding blackout curtains to your bedroom can replicate that near-perfect darkness that makes a great night’s sleep just a little easier to attain, but you should also pay attention to the lighting. Getting that warm, dim hotel vibe is all about choosing light bulbs that aren’t harsh—avoiding “blue light” in your bedroom can lead to better sleep, so install some sleep-promoting light bulbs and make sure you’ve got the lighting set very low when you enter your bedroom every night.

Cool the room down more

Temperature has a big impact on how well you sleep—heat and humidity can interrupt sleep cycles, so hotels usually keep their rooms pretty cool. The ideal temperature for sleeping is probably lower than you think—it’s about 65 degrees. Setting your room’s climate control to hit that temp when you go to bed will give you that cozy hotel room vibe that encourages deep, restful sleep. Boosting air movement and ventilation with a ceiling fan, an oscillating fan, or by installing a window air conditioner can also help get you closer to that ideal temperature.

Plus, fans and air conditioners double as white noise, which can also block out the ambient sounds that can startle us out of a deep sleep. You can also add a white noise machine or use an app on your phone to block out even more noise.

Straighten things up

One final secret why hotel rooms are so restful? They’re tidy and cleaned regularly. Housekeeping showing up every day, putting everything back into place and cleaning things up can have an effect on how you perceive the environment. Studies have shown that clutter and mess can have a negative impact on our sleep, so the magical way hotel rooms stay clean and tidy contributes to getting better sleep. So if you’re looking to improve your sleep experience at home, do a weekly sweep of the bedroom and put things away, wipes down surfaces, and freshen the air to give it a sense of cleanliness and order.