Talk to Sherlock Holmes.

Have a conversation with literary legends. Then read their stories — illustrated, voiced, and brought to life.

MEET THE CHARACTERS

Start a conversation.

These characters know their stories. They'll answer your questions, challenge your thinking, and maybe recommend a book or two.

Sherlock Holmes

Sherlock Holmes

Arthur Conan Doyle

You see, but you do not observe. The distinction is clear.

Chat with Holmes
Elizabeth Bennet

Elizabeth Bennet

Jane Austen

I could easily forgive his pride, if he had not mortified mine.

Chat with Elizabeth
Huckleberry Finn

Huckleberry Finn

Mark Twain

All right, then, I'll go to hell.

Chat with Huck
Meet All Characters →

Classic literature feels inaccessible.

These stories shaped our culture. But for many people, they're stuck behind barriers.

Intimidating to start

400 pages of Victorian prose. Where do you even begin? The characters feel distant.

Hard to visualize

Dense descriptions of people and places. Who is this character again? What do they look like?

Wrong format for your life

You have ten minutes on a train, not hours in a quiet room. The book doesn't bend to you.

No emotional hook

You know you "should" read it. But nothing makes you actually want to.

Then read the story your way.

Once you've met the characters, experience their stories in any format. Switch modes anytime — your place syncs.

Illustrated

Original text with AI-generated scene illustrations

Audio

Full narration with character voices and ambient sound

Summary

Condensed narration for when time is short

Multimedia

Full AV experience with music and cinematic presentation

Comic

Speech bubbles and captions for visual readers

Character with visual callouts showing tracked details
Scar from page 50 →
← Victorian attire tracked
Aging shown accurately →

Consistent. Faithful. Complete.

We read the entire text before generating a single image. Every character detail. Every injury. Every change.

If the author writes that the hero has a scar on page 50, it's there on page 400 too. If a character ages, loses an arm, changes clothes — we track it.

This isn't random AI art. It's faithful visualization of what the author described.

Reading that adapts to you.

For many people, this isn't convenience — it's accessibility.

Visual learners & aphantasia

See characters, locations, and scenes — no imagination required

ADHD & attention issues

Abridged versions and comic mode keep focus sharp

Memory difficulties

"Previously..." recaps and always-visible character panels

Dyslexia

Dyslexia-friendly fonts, adjustable sizing, high contrast

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"Human in, human out."