Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
CiteIt.net Demo: Classics Read Aloud, Chapter 4
This is a Mockup of Substack using CiteIt.net.
Classics Read Aloud is available through multiple channels, including Spotify and Substack. (Drawing by Sir John Tenniel)
If Substack implemented contextual-style citations, Substack writers could use CiteIt.net to show their readers the context of their quotations and enable readers to easily listen to the quotations from the audio transcripts.
Below is a simple demonstration of a quote of Alice in Wonderland using a demo YouTube copy (since Substack doesn't yet support CiteIt).
Quote Example
In chapter 4, Alice found herself falling: Well,” thought Alice to herself, after such a fall as this, I shall think nothing of tumbling downstairs.
If you click on the above quote, you can listen to the audio for Chapter 4 and view the transcript.
Alice began to get rather sleepy and went on saying to herself in a dreamy sort of way, "Do cats eat bats? Do cats eat bats?" And sometimes, "Do bats eat cats? For you see, as she couldn't answer either question, it didn't much matter which way she put it." She felt that she was dozing off and had just begun to dream that she was walking hand in hand with Dina, and was saying to her very earnestly, "Now, Dina, tell me the truth. Did you ever eat a bat?
More Substack articles:
I manually mocked-up demo articles from selected Substack authors to demonstrate how Substack would look if it used CiteIt's contextual citations:
- Ken Klippenstein (Journalist)
- Matt Taibbi (Journalist)
- Doomberg: Substack's #1 Paid Finance Newsletter.
- A Brief History of Times
- Classics Read Aloud: Alice & Wonderland (Demo)
- Adam Johnson (Citations Needed, The Column)
- Heather Cox Richardson: Boston College (History Professor)

