Amazon has rolled out Ask this Book, a generative AI Q&A tool inside the Kindle iOS app that can answer reader questions about books—while authors and publishers reportedly have no opt-out option. The launch is already prompting fresh questions across publishing about permissions, transparency, and how AI features interact with copyrighted text.
A new in-book AI assistant is designed to keep readers in the flow, but the always-on approach is drawing criticism from parts of the publishing world.
What launched and where
Amazon says Ask this Book is now available to U.S. customers using the Kindle iOS app and is enabled for thousands of English-language best-selling Kindle titles. The company also says the feature will expand to Kindle devices and Android next year, without naming an exact date.
In Amazon’s description, the tool is meant to provide quick, contextual answers about plot, characters, relationships, and themes without pushing readers out of the page they are on. Amazon also emphasizes that the answers are spoiler-free by limiting what the feature reveals to the reader’s current position in the book.
How Ask this Book works
Readers can access the feature from the in-book menu or by highlighting a passage, then selecting suggested prompts or typing a custom question to receive an answer on the page. Amazon says readers can ask follow-up questions to continue the thread, effectively turning the reading session into an in-book Q&A experience.
Amazon positions the feature as a comprehension aid—useful for quickly clarifying who a character is, why a scene matters, or what a passage implies—while still trying to avoid revealing later events. The company has not publicly detailed the underlying model, technical safeguards, or licensing basis in the product announcement materials highlighted by industry coverage.
Key facts at a glance
| Item | What Amazon/coverage says |
| Feature name | Ask this Book |
| What it does | AI answers questions about the book while you read (plot/characters/themes). |
| Spoiler controls | Only reveals info up to the current reading position. |
| Availability now | Kindle iOS app (U.S.), for thousands of English-language best sellers. |
| Planned rollout | Kindle devices + Android next year / broader rollout referenced by coverage. |
| Opt-out | Authors/publishers reportedly cannot opt titles out, per statements relayed by publishing-trade coverage. |
Why authors say they can’t opt out
The sharpest criticism has centered on an always on policy described by publishing-industry reporting and echoed by multiple outlets: authors and publishers reportedly do not have a mechanism to remove their titles from the feature once enabled. That stance, as relayed in coverage, has surprised some publishing professionals who say they learned the feature was live only after trade outlets began asking questions.
Critics argue the opt-out issue is not only about reader convenience but also about control: who gets to decide whether a copyrighted work can be processed by an AI layer for in-context analysis. Some reporting also notes unanswered questions from industry stakeholders about what permissions Amazon relies on, and what guardrails exist to prevent errors, misuse, or unintended secondary uses of text.
There is also a trust issue specific to books: even if answers are confined to a reader’s purchased or borrowed copy, an AI response that misstates a plot point or character motivation could reshape how readers interpret an author’s intent. Publishing observers have flagged that the combination of limited transparency and mandatory inclusion can intensify concerns at a time when AI and copyright disputes remain highly active across creative industries.
How this fits Amazon’s broader Kindle AI rollout
Ask this Book arrives alongside other AI-assisted reading initiatives Amazon has been adding to Kindle, including recap-style features designed to help readers re-enter long series. Earlier in 2025, Amazon introduced Recaps for Kindle series, and TechCrunch reported Amazon confirmed those recaps are AI-generated, with an Amazon spokesperson saying the company uses generative AI plus human moderators to produce the summaries.
Amazon also previewed Story So Far, another spoiler-aware feature meant to help readers catch up to their current spot in a book, positioning it as part of a set of AI reading tools meant to preserve the magic of reading on Kindle. In its Kindle Scribe product announcement, Amazon described Story So Far and Ask this Book as features that would be available for thousands of Kindle books in the U.S., first via the Kindle iOS app and then on Kindle devices.
This trajectory suggests Amazon is steadily turning Kindle from a primarily passive reading platform into an assisted-reading environment—one where AI can summarize, recap, and now answer questions inline. The unresolved question, highlighted by the opt-out controversy, is whether that assistance layer will evolve with clearer rights controls and disclosures for authors and publishers.
What happens next
Amazon says the feature will expand beyond iOS to Kindle devices and Android next year, which could broaden both adoption and scrutiny as more readers encounter the tool by default. Industry pressure may now focus on whether Amazon adds title-level controls, clearer documentation of how answers are generated, and stronger assurances about accuracy and data handling.
For readers, the near-term impact is straightforward: eligible Kindle books gain an embedded, spoiler-aware helper that can explain context without leaving the page. For authors and publishers, the next phase will likely hinge on whether always on remains the policy—and whether major publishing partners push for contractual or technical changes as the rollout expands.
Timeline: recent Kindle AI features
| Date (as reported) | Feature | What changed |
| Apr 2025 | Recaps | Amazon confirmed recaps are AI-generated, with human moderation referenced by TechCrunch. |
| Dec 2025 | Ask this Book | Amazon says it’s live on Kindle iOS (U.S.) for thousands of English-language best sellers. |
| 2026 (planned) | Ask this Book expansion | Amazon says it’s coming to Kindle devices and Android next year. |






