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ORAT — write by speaking, in your own voice.

Write your book by talking.

A novel is about 80,000 words — roughly 20 hours of talking. You spend more than that in your car every month. ORAT turns those stolen minutes into chapters, in your own voice.

The AI doesn't write for you. It formats what you actually said — cleaning up the ums and false starts, keeping every word yours.

Say it. Shape it. Story it.

Begin writing — it's free

How it works

Built for manuscripts that grow over weeks: continuity checks across chapters, voice commands like "new chapter" and "mark as dialogue," and live fact-checking for non-fiction.

When to use ORAT

Meet Reginald

He lives in ORAT. He tracks your progress, marks your milestones, and offers encouragement in the only way he knows: with measured approval and precisely calibrated disappointment.

He is rooting for you. Quietly. In his own way.

Questions, answered.

What is ORAT?

ORAT is a voice-first writing studio for authors. You speak your manuscript, and ORAT shapes what you said into clean prose — in your voice, never the AI's.

How does turning speech into prose work?

Speak your draft. ORAT transcribes it, then shapes run-ons, filler words, and false starts into readable prose. It never invents content — only what you actually said.

Does the AI write for me?

No. ORAT never invents. It formats and structures what you dictated, preserving your voice and intent. The words on the page are yours.

Can I write a novel or screenplay by speaking?

Yes. ORAT supports long-form fiction, screenplays, essays, memoir, and academic writing — anything you can speak. A novel is roughly 80,000 words, or about 20 hours of talking.

What's the best app to write by dictation?

ORAT is built specifically for authors who think faster than they type. Unlike generic voice-to-text, it produces manuscript-ready prose in your voice — not a transcript cluttered with every "um" and restart.

Can I use it on the go — in the car, on a walk?

Yes. ORAT is mobile-first. Record anywhere — the car, a walk, between meetings, at 2 a.m. — then review and shape your draft later from any device.

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