For narrators who can't use voice
This page is for people who want to make a book but can't — or shouldn't — speak it aloud. Memoir works for you too, with no euphemisms and no second-class version. Here is exactly how.
Voice isn't available to everyone, or in every room. Text input is a first-class way in.
When speech is hard
After a stroke or with aphasia, a vocal-cord injury, MND or ALS, dysarthria — the words are still yours, even when saying them out loud isn't simple.
A hearing world's friction
For Deaf narrators and signed-language speakers, writing is often the most direct way to tell a story on your own terms.
When the room demands silence
Operational silence in the field, a sleeping infant's nap, an open-plan desk — sometimes you simply can't say it out loud.
When the connection won't hold
On a slow or unreliable uplink, text travels where an audio upload can't, so distance never costs you the book.
How text mode works
Write a session whenever it suits you. It runs through the very same pipeline as a recording — and produces the same quality of book.
- Per session
- 50–2,500 words
- Pipeline
- Identical to voice
- Result
- The same finished book
Everything you keep
- A structured outline and chapters
- Harmonization across every session
- World Bible and conflict detection
- Export to EPUB, PDF, and DOCX
The one thing that changes
Your book is written in a clear literary register in your own language, rather than carrying the cadence of your spoken voice. Everything else is exactly the same — and the book is still entirely yours.
A longer window to be sure
Because text-only narrators may need two or three sessions before knowing the voice is right, we extend the money-back guarantee from fourteen days to thirty — trust-based, with no documentation required.
The book is still entirely yours.
Start writing whenever you're ready. No recording necessary.