No, not really. The audiobook exists, but you'd need a subscription service like Audible or Spotify Premium to get it without purchasing individually. Some libraries have it, but that's about it for free access.
I listened to a sample on YouTube once—it was just the first chapter uploaded by the publisher as a promo. Wasn't the full thing. Finished it last month; the narration is good, fits the rivals-to-lovers tension well.
Trying to recall if they've done a full-cast audio version yet... last I checked on Libby with my local library card, the waitlist for the audiobook was insane, but at least the digital copy was available. Sometimes Audible will have it as part of the Plus catalog, but that fluctuates monthly.
I got the sample on Google Play Books, but after the first few chapters, you have to buy it or use a credit. The author's socials might occasionally drop promo codes for a free download from the publisher's site, but a full, legal stream of all chapters for free? Doubtful. Most official platforms want you to use a subscription or a trial. Even Spotify's audiobook section only includes it with a Premium subscription, and you're limited to a certain number of hours per month.
Okay, this is a classic 'access intent' question. People often confuse 'free with subscription' for 'free online.' There's no site legally hosting the complete 'Divine Rivals' audiobook without some form of paywall or library access.
Your best route is a library app like Libby or Hoopla. If your library has it, you can borrow it for free. That's the legal loophole. Otherwise, you're looking at Audible's free trial for a credit or maybe catching a sale. I'd steer clear of random sites claiming full chapters—audio quality is usually terrible and it's definitely not supporting the authors.
2026-07-14 01:58:16
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Legal free audiobooks are tough but not impossible for something as big as 'Divine Rivals'. Your public library is the absolute first stop—apps like Libby or Hoopla. I borrowed it through Libby last month, had to wait a couple weeks on a hold list, but it was worth it. No cost, completely legit.
Sometimes publishers or services offer free trials that include audiobook credits. I know Audible and Scribd have done that. You could sign up, use the credit on 'Divine Rivals', then cancel before the trial ends if you're careful. It's a bit of a loophole but still within their rules.
Just avoid those sketchy YouTube channels or random websites claiming to have it for free; they’re rarely legal and the audio quality is usually awful anyway. The library app route is slower, but it feels good supporting the system.
Man, I see this question a lot and I get the impulse, but I gotta be real: you're not gonna find a legitimate way to get the full 'Divine Rivals' audiobook for free in a downloadable, offline way. Audiobooks, especially from a major publisher like Macmillan, are treated just like the physical product. That production cost is huge, with narrators and everything.
You might find those sketchy sites that claim to have MP3s, but half the links are dead or lead to malware. More importantly, it takes money away from the author, Rebecca Ross, and the whole creative team. The actual path for free is your public library. Apps like Libby or Hoopla let you borrow the audiobook for free with your library card. You can download it for offline listening during your loan period. Wait times can be long for popular titles, but it's the real deal.
I just put a hold on it through Libby myself; says it's a 6-week wait. Better that than dealing with some janky site asking me to complete ten surveys.
Took me a while to figure this one out, actually. I was trying to check on my phone’s audiobook app and kept hitting walls. Turns out, the availability really depends on your platform of choice. From what I dug up, if you go to sites like Audible or Libro.fm, they do tend to offer those free samples—usually a five-minute clip you can stream right in your browser without any account. It’s not the full chapter, but it’s enough to get a feel for the narrator’s voice and the general atmosphere.
I remember listening to a sample of 'Divine Rivals' on Audible specifically because I was on the fence about using a credit. The sample was decent; gave me a clear sense of the pacing. What’s tricky is that sometimes these samples aren’t prominently displayed—you gotta click on the audiobook product page and look for the ‘Sample’ button near the play controls. It’s not hidden, but it’s easy to miss if you’re just scanning. I’d say it’s worth the small effort, especially since hearing the narration can make or break an audiobook experience for me.
A friend mentioned they couldn’t find it on Google Play Books, though, so it might be spotty there. My take is to stick with the bigger dedicated audiobook retailers for consistency.