Turn Your Radish Serial Into an Audiobook With AI
If you write on Radish, you already know the rhythm: short episodes, a cliffhanger at the end of nearly every one, and readers who tap through chapters in single sittings on their phones. That episodic shape is exactly what makes a serial fun to listen to. With AudioProducer.ai you can turn your Radish chapters into a finished audio file you download and share, without narrating a word yourself. If you are new to the tool, our guide on how to make an audiobook with AI walks through the basics. Here is how the process works for a serial, and what to expect at each step.
Why serial platforms suit audio so well
Serials are built for momentum. Each episode is short enough to finish on a commute, and the cliffhanger pulls a reader straight into the next one. Audio leans into all of that. A ten-minute chapter is a perfect listening chunk, and a well-timed cliffhanger lands even harder when it is voiced instead of read. Because your serial is already broken into episodes, you have a natural chapter list to work from. You are not carving one long manuscript into pieces. The structure your Radish readers follow is the same structure your listeners will follow.
Serial listeners also tend to binge. When a new episode drops, the people who follow you want it in whatever format fits their day. Offering an audio version alongside the text meets that habit head on, and it gives your back catalog a second life for readers who would rather listen than scroll. If you also publish on other serial apps, the same approach works for a Tapas serial or a Kindle Vella serial.
Getting your Radish chapters into text
The first step is simple: gather the text of the chapters you want to produce. Copy your chapter from your own draft or from your Radish dashboard into a plain document, one chapter at a time. Work from your own source rather than trying to scrape or import from the app, so you keep control of exactly what goes into each episode.
Clean the text as you go. Strip out anything that only makes sense on the page, such as episode header art notes, tap-to-continue prompts, or stray formatting. Fix obvious typos, since the voice reads exactly what is on the page. Spell out anything that could trip a narrator, like an abbreviation you want pronounced in full. A few minutes of tidying per chapter pays off in a cleaner listen.
Casting and performing episode by episode
Once your chapter text is ready, paste it into AudioProducer.ai and choose a voice. Audition your narrator on a real passage from your serial rather than a generic sample, so you hear how it handles your dialogue, your pacing, and your character names. If your story has distinct point-of-view characters or a lot of back-and-forth dialogue, you can assign different voices so each speaker sounds like themselves.
You can also clone a voice if you want a specific sound, including your own. Voice cloning requires consent: use your own voice, or a voice you have clear permission to use. Once you are happy with the casting, generate the episode, listen through the full chapter, and regenerate any spot that needs another pass. Listening all the way through is the step people are tempted to skip, and it is the one that catches the small things a quick scan misses.
Keeping voices consistent across a long serial
A serial can run for dozens or hundreds of episodes, so consistency matters more than it does for a standalone. Decide your narrator and any character voices early, and reuse those same assignments for every new episode. Keep a short note of who sounds like what, along with the correct pronunciation of any invented names, places, or terms your world uses. When episode forty introduces a name you first used in episode three, that note keeps the pronunciation matching what your listeners already know. Our piece on choosing an AI narrator for serialized fiction goes deeper on holding a voice steady across a long run, and the same lock-it-early habit carries over to an Inkitt serial or any other ongoing story.
The practical workflow is repeatable: paste the new chapter, apply your locked voice assignments, generate, listen, adjust, export. Because you set the casting once, each new episode becomes a quick production loop rather than a fresh decision every time.
What you export and where it goes
When an episode sounds right, you export it as an MP3 that you download and keep. That file is yours to publish wherever you already reach readers. AudioProducer.ai produces the audio file; it does not distribute, publish, or host it for you, and it is not connected to Audible, Spotify, Apple, or any podcast feed. You take the finished file and post it on the platform of your choice, whether that is a podcast host, a members area, a download link for your readers, or anywhere else you share your work.
You can start free with 1,200 words, no card required, which is enough to run a full chapter through and hear the result on your own writing. Paid plans start from $39.99 per month when you are ready to produce a series in volume. Whatever you make, the text and the audio remain yours.
Frequently asked questions
Ready to hear your serial out loud? Try a chapter free and listen to how it sounds in your narrator's voice.
Frequently asked questions
- Can I turn my Radish serial into audio without narrating it myself?
- Yes. You paste your chapter text into AudioProducer.ai, choose or clone a voice, and generate a finished MP3. You do not record anything yourself, and voice cloning requires consent to use your own voice or one you have permission to use.
- Does AudioProducer.ai publish my serial audio to Audible, Spotify, or a podcast feed?
- No. AudioProducer.ai exports an audio file you download and keep. It does not distribute, publish, or host your audio, and it is not connected to Audible, Spotify, Apple, or any podcast feed. You take the file and publish it wherever you already reach readers.
- How do I keep character voices consistent across a long serial?
- Choose your narrator and character voices early and reuse the same assignments for every new episode. Keep a short note of who sounds like what, plus the pronunciation of any invented names, so episode forty matches episode three.