Certainly on Android I found that TTS via OS is one screen at a time. I'd expect that on iOS, mac, Windows, Linux etc too (I tested also on Linux) because OS level TTS is an accessibility feature. You need an application with native TTS support that can call the OS API for it. Which is what pocketbook on Android does, so works well.
Voice control is a completely separate thing but can be part of an accessibility suite. It used to be standalone but now is often very invasive sending much to a server somewhere and not working without internet. Usually there is some sort of download option offering offline use, but not with Echo and some other systems.
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