The reMarkable 2, a review

May 2024 · 9 minute read

I am not someone who normally writes reviews of a product. I’ll occasionally make recommendations in bulk, but a dedicated post? For one device? It just doesn’t happen.

And yet here I am, compelled to write one for my Precious reMarkable 2.

Note: I am not getting any sort of kickback for this; I was not given a free device; and I have zero connection to the reMarkable company. I just really freaking love this thing.

Good question. It’s an e-paper device with very limited functionality, but that achieves total excellence for what it does do.

As someone who handwrites a lot and edits all her books by hand, I’ve been on the hunt for a suitable device for years. I really hate how much paper I use; even if I print tiny and double-sided, even if I always recycle or use the paper as kindling in our wood stove…it’s wasteful. I know that! But at the same time, what takes me twenty minutes to do by hand can easily take a hours if I’m on the computer.

I just don’t do well with screens. At least not creatively.

We each have different ways in which our creative neural pathways are stimulated, and for me, the tactile sensation of a pen on paper is the way.

I also type, of course, and love working on my Alphasmart Neo2 or in Scrivener. But, the bulk of my pre-writing happens in notebooks (or on a white board). And by pre-writing, I mean:

I also do ALL of my editing on printed pages. From developmental edits to copyedits. This has always helped me view the book in a way that being in a document on Word or Scrivener does not. I can’t explain why, but there’s something about looking at the book as a book and then making notations by hand…

Well, there’s a line in The Hunting Moon that expresses it:

Like a pipeline converting crude oil in to gasoline or corn into moonshine, she distills the raw, useless words that float around her mind into feelings scrawled across the page.

This is how I have always worked, and trying to become a digital-only person has never worked for now.

Until now. (duh-duh-duh!)

For over a decade now, I’ve tried to find a device or computer that would replace paper. I had one of the earliest touchscreen laptops of ye ages past, but nope. That was clunky, heavy, and never felt natural.

I’ve tried iPads with different “paper-like” screen protectors, but again, nothing ever came close to feeling like actual pen and paper. Yet I have been resistant to get the reMarkable out of a fear that it wouldn’t really capture the same joy that paper and pen give me.

So after a year of listening to me moan about how I wanted to try a reMarkable 2 but ugh, the price, the Frenchman stepped in and gave me one for Christmas. Probably just so I’d shut up.

But wow, you guys. You guys. How I wish I’d gotten this device sooner!

Here are the functions:

This list might not seem long, but as mentioned above: the reMarkable 2 does what it’s supposed to do and it does it very well.

As with any device, there are some limitations. And given the price, they might be dealbreakers for some of my fellow paper-lovers.

Overall, the cons don’t outweigh the pros for this baby. I love it so much.

To really show (not tell!) why I love this device so much, here are some shots of how the reMarkable 2 looks and how I’ve been using it for my writing and editorial needs.

Lastly, but certainly not least, I want to share how I edit on the device and in the app. I learned quickly that, while it’s a pain to go through and highlight every notation in green after I write it, it makes the later steps so much easier.

So what are the later steps? Well, one thing the reMarkable 2 has not been able to do for me is to eliminate the need for me to type in my handwritten changes.

In other words, there is no way a computer can interpret what I’ve got in that third screenshot and automatically apply it to a document.

Heck, another human can’t always interpret my notations! But alas, this is how I have always edited; it’s what is fastest and most creatively flowing for me. So if I have to continue typing in handwritten edits, so be it.

BUT—and this is such a huge BUT—I have found a seamless way to now handle typing in my changes.

  • I have a secondary monitor that I connect to my MacBook. On the left side of the screen, I have my reMarkable app and the PDF I’m working with. This is where the green highlighter is so helpful.

  • On the left is Scrivener with the matching scene open.

  • I glance left, find a change, then glance right, and make the change.

  • This has saved my neck muscles, y’all.

    And it has also saved so much time.

    No more glancing down at a piece of paper, no more flipping to the back of a double-sided printout, no more flipping to the next page, and no more squinting to find my pen notations—because yes, although I have always used colorful pens, it’s not nearly as sharp as this screen. The brightness of the green highlighter makes it so easy to find changes, and the side-by-side alignment on a screen makes applying the changes easy.

    It’s glorious. I’m obsessed.

    And there you have it. That is why I love the reMarkable 2 and how I use it to brainstorm, draft, and edit.

    I realize this feels like a big advertisement, but like I said: I get absolutely no reward from this post. I just really love my device, and for all of you creators out there who work like me…

    Well, maybe it’s worth looking into getting one of your own.

    Feel free to ask questions in the comments, if you have them! My other dog, Asimov, was just diagnosed with liver cancer, so I can’t pretend my life is feeling easy yet. Plus, I really, really have to finish The Whispering Night so it can get into copyedits. 😬

    But I will do my best to answer questions in a timely manner.

    Happy writing, friends!

    💚 - Sooz

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