Speechify is the #1 audio reader in the world. Get through books, docs, articles, PDFs, email – anything
you read – faster.
“Speechify is absolutely brilliant. Growing up with dyslexia this would have made a big difference. I’m so glad to have it today.“
Sir Richard Branson
By: Veronica Roth
By: Mark Manson
By: Yuval Noah Harari
By: Becky Kennedy
By: Taylor Jenkins Reid
By: Paulo Coelho
By: Dan Brown
By: Shelby Van Pelt
By: Khaled Hosseini
By: Stephen King
By: C. S. Lewis
By: J. R. R. Tolkien
By: Colleen Hoover
By: Neil deGrasse Tyson
By: Bill O'Reilly
By: Fredrik Backman
By: Dr. Norman Vincent Peale
By: Frank Herbert
By: Max Lucado
By: Ian McEwan
By: Mary Kubica
By: Alex Michaelides
By: Jocko Willink
By: Gillian Mcallister
By: Colleen Hoover
By: Kristin Hannah
By: Vince Flynn
By: Brandon Sanderson
By: Dale Carnegie
By: J. R. R. Tolkien
By: Anthony Doerr
By: Chris Voss
By: Laura Dave
By: Jessica Knoll
By: Jennette Mccurdy
By: Gary John Bishop
By: Sarah J. Maas
By: J. R. R. Tolkien
By: Rebecca Connolly
By: Fredrik Backman
By: Stephen R. Covey
By: Kelly Ripa
By: J. R. R. Tolkien
By: Oprah Winfrey
By: Colleen Hoover
By: Viola Davis
By: Samantha Jayne Allen
By: Khaled Hosseini
Set in Bulgaria, the play was set during a short war between Bulgaria and Serbia in the 1880s. It begins with a young romantic Reina Petkov and her mother, Catherine, excitedly discussing the successful assault of a cavalry led by the handsome and heroic Sergius that Reina is engaged in.
Read BookSonnets from the Portuguese is comprised of forty-four sonnets. Robert Browning used to call his wife “the Portuguese,” which is why she chose this title. She spent much of her life ill and frail, and she never expected to find love.
Read BookOmar Khayyam’s Rubiyat is a poem with deep heavenly and spiritual meaning. This poem’s beauty and simplicity are so perfect that people of all religions, as well as those who have no faith at all, may find heavenly peace in it.
Read Book“His Last Bow” by Arthur Conan Doyle is an espionage thriller, not a detective mystery. The narrative might have been written to bolster public morale during World War I. It is recounted in the third person, rather in the first person like in a Sherlock Holmes tale.
Read Book