Barnes & Noble on Monday sent out invitations for a November 7 event that will likely include the introduction of a revamped Nook device.

Barnes & Noble on Monday sent out invitations for a November 7 event that will likely include the introduction of a revamped Nook device.

"Please join us for a very special announcement," the invite reads, below an image of the Nook logo.

The event will take place in New York next Monday, and will kick off at 10am. PCMag will be there, so stay tuned for all the details.

The invite comes several days after The Digital Reader blog that said Barnes & Noble was readying its store for a November 7 announcement that would likely include a revamped Nook Color.

One individual, who works in a Barnes & Noble store, told The Digital Reader that they have replaced a customer service counter with a huge Nook boutique. "Our manager told us, this space was not designed to house just 2 nooks. He was being candid, he said, November 7th there will be a major announcement from the company. he concluded saying it was exciting times. Obviously something is coming," the source said.

Last month, The Digital Reader said that B&N was , which would possibly be known as the Acclaim. The Nook Smart Touch e-reader would still be offered at $139 while the Nook Color would remain at $249. Specs were not provided.

The event comes about a week before Amazon is on November 15. Pre-orders for that device started on September 28, and Amazon said recently that it has on the Fire due to demand.

Barnes & Noble last in May, unveiling a device that was 35 percent lighter and 15 percent thinner than the first Nook. The company an improved battery life and 80 percent less flashing on the 6-inch touch screen when flipping pages.

The Nook Color, meanwhile, in October 2010. The $249 device includes a 7-inch touch screen with 1,024-by-600 resolution and 169 pixels per inch. It comes with 8GB of storage, expandable up to 32GB with a microSD card. In April, Barnes & Noble to the Nook Color, offering its own app store, an email client, the ability to play Flash video, and enhanced books for the Android-based device.

For more, see PCMag's full reviews of the and , as well as the slideshow below.