Taylor Roark has narrated 4 audiobooks on Listento.it by 5 authors, with an average listener rating of 5★ across 4 ratings. The most-rated is You Say More than You Think.

Now you’re talking! Do you want to be bulletproof at work, secure in your relationship, and content in your own skin? If so, it’s more important than ever to be aware of what your body is saying to the outside world. Unfortunately, most of what you’ve heard from other body language experts is wrong, and, as a result, your actions may be hurting, not helping, you. With sass and a keen eye, media favorite Janine Driver teaches you the skills she used every day to stay alive during her 15 years as a body language expert at the ATF. Janine’s seven-day plan and her seven-second solutions teach you dozens of body language fixes to turn any interpersonal situation to your advantage. She reveals methods here that other experts refuse to share with the public, and she debunks major myths other experts swear are fact: Giving more eye contact is key when you’re trying to impress someone. Not necessarily true. It’s actually more important where you point your belly button. This small body shift communicates true interest more powerfully than constant eye contact. The “steeple” hand gesture will give you the upper hand during negotiations and business meetings. Wrong. Driver has seen this overbearing gesture backfire, more often than not. Instead, she suggests two new steeples that give you power without making you seem overly aggressive: the basketball steeple and the A-OK two-fingered steeple. Happy people command power and attention by smiling just before they meet new people. Studies have shown that people who do this are viewed as beta leaders. Alpha leaders smile once they shake your hand and hear your name. At a time when every advantage counts and first impressions matter more than ever, this is the book to help you really get your message across.
©2011 Janine Driver, Mariska van Aalst (P)2020 Aalst LLC

This edited collection of essays about cosmic consciousness was selected and edited by Professor David Christopher Lane. Includes excerpts from Yogananda, Bucke, St. Teresa of Avila, Ramakrishna, Ramana Maharshi, Huxley, The Tibetan Book of the Dead, and more. With an introduction and conclusion by Dr. Lane.
©2020 MSAC Philosophy Group (P)2020 David Christopher Lane

One thing rings true about all substance abusers - whether it be alcohol or drugs or both - at one point in time, they will tell you two things: I don't have a problem. I can quit anytime I want to. Which, of course, is far from the truth. Once that demon is on your back, weighing you down day after day and week after week and month after month and year after year, the option you once had to stop on your own is long gone now. A person's addictions - and don't let anybody fool you into thinking differently, it is an addiction - can suck your very heart and soul dry of who you once were. You cannot stop on your own, either. You need help. You need God. But first of all, you need to admit you have a problem and stop fooling yourself into thinking you don't.
©2020 David Boyer (P)2020 David Boyer

Dr. Kohms is used to listening to people talk about the pieces in their lives that aren’t playing well together. But does he know his own life as well as he thinks he does? Does anyone truly know what their partners, dependants, or friends are up to? In this short tale, sink into the prison to which Peter Kohms is sequestered, and forced to watch a version of life at home when he isn’t around.
©2020 Joshua Nsangi (P)2020 Joshua Nsangi