Any subject, rendered as fiction you'd actually finish. Stories are how humans remember — so we made them the curriculum.
Boundless takes a subject — anything from compound interest to quantum entanglement — and composes a full novel around it. The story is the syllabus. The characters are the mnemonics. The plot is the arc of the ideas themselves.
You read like you'd read any novel. You finish knowing a subject the way fiction lets you know a place.
The reactor had been cold for seventeen years when Halden pushed the door open. It made a sound like something deciding whether to wake up. He understood, in the way a man understands rain, that heat had been leaving this building for longer than anyone had been paying attention — and that the leaving had a direction, and that the direction was the crime.
Entropy, his father had told him once, is not decay. It's just the way the universe keeps score.
He lit a cigarette and walked further in, counting the gauges that no longer moved…
Studies on narrative transportation have shown it for decades: humans retain ideas embedded in story far better than the same ideas presented as facts. Textbooks lose. Novels win.
Boundless treats that as a tool, not a curiosity.
A concept anchored to a character, a place, or a conflict survives recall. A concept in a bullet point does not.
Textbooks get abandoned at page 40. Novels pull you forward. We measured completion, not coverage.
Same topic, different novels — tuned to audience, length, and rigor. Primer, undergrad, or monograph-dense.
Every book you generate lives in your library. Citable, re-openable, sharable with a friend who is also curious.
A small sampling from the library. Every book is made on demand — no two readers get the same copy.
A slow, generational story about a family vineyard. Interest compounds off-page. Readers finish understanding why rate and time matter more than timing.
A cellular biologist disappears. Her niece pieces together her work, and in doing so, the reader walks the full path from DNA replication to protein folding.
An epistolary novel from the perspective of a star in its last stages. Every letter is a stage of stellar evolution, rigorously told.
People don't remember information. They remember stories — and the information that was hiding inside them.
Pick a subject. Pick a genre. Get a book. It's that simple. Request access below and we'll send you a generation credit to start your library.