エピソード

  • The Woman by Kristin Hannah complete Audiobook PART 2
    2025/05/30
    She was just a girl when she left—young, idealistic, aching to matter.
    The war was far away. Until it wasn’t. When Frances “Frankie” McGrath volunteers to serve during a time when women were expected to stay silent, stay pretty, stay home, she steps into a world that doesn’t know what to do with someone like her. A woman in a place meant for men. A warzone wrapped in lies. A history no one wants to remember. The jungles of Vietnam echo with secrets—some she witnesses, others she becomes part of. And when the dust settles, when the uniforms come off, the battle doesn’t end. Back home, nothing is the same.
    Not the people. Not the country. Not her. Now, haunted by what she can’t forget and silenced by those who refuse to hear, Frankie must decide: will she vanish into the quiet, or will she find her voice in a world that’s desperate to pretend she never existed? Because sometimes the most dangerous battles… are the ones no one sees.
    #KristinHannah, #TheWomen, #HistoricalFiction, #VietnamWarNovel, #WomenInWar, #FrancesMcGrath, #EmotionalReads, #WarAndAftermath, #FemaleVoicesInHistory, #KristinHannahBooks, #HeartbreakingFiction, #BookClubReads, #AudiobookLovers, #AudibleHistoricalFiction, #WomenAtWar, #UnheardStories, #CourageAndSacrifice, #NewYorkTimesBestseller, #MustRead2024, #PowerfulFemaleLead
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    6 時間 53 分
  • The Woman by Kristin Hannah complete Audiobook PART 1
    2025/05/30
    She was just a girl when she left—young, idealistic, aching to matter.
    The war was far away. Until it wasn’t. When Frances “Frankie” McGrath volunteers to serve during a time when women were expected to stay silent, stay pretty, stay home, she steps into a world that doesn’t know what to do with someone like her. A woman in a place meant for men. A warzone wrapped in lies. A history no one wants to remember. The jungles of Vietnam echo with secrets—some she witnesses, others she becomes part of. And when the dust settles, when the uniforms come off, the battle doesn’t end. Back home, nothing is the same.
    Not the people. Not the country. Not her. Now, haunted by what she can’t forget and silenced by those who refuse to hear, Frankie must decide: will she vanish into the quiet, or will she find her voice in a world that’s desperate to pretend she never existed? Because sometimes the most dangerous battles… are the ones no one sees.
    #KristinHannah, #TheWomen, #HistoricalFiction, #VietnamWarNovel, #WomenInWar, #FrancesMcGrath, #EmotionalReads, #WarAndAftermath, #FemaleVoicesInHistory, #KristinHannahBooks, #HeartbreakingFiction, #BookClubReads, #AudiobookLovers, #AudibleHistoricalFiction, #WomenAtWar, #UnheardStories, #CourageAndSacrifice, #NewYorkTimesBestseller, #MustRead2024, #PowerfulFemaleLead
    続きを読む 一部表示
    6 時間 53 分
  • It Ends with by Colleen Hoover complete Audiobook PART2
    2025/05/30
    She thought she had left the past behind.
    A new city. A new life. A chance at something like love. But the heart has a memory, and some scars run deeper than the skin. Lily Bloom is no stranger to pain—but she's also no stranger to hope. When she meets Ryle, a brilliant, assertive neurosurgeon with a troubled gaze and a charming smile, something begins to bloom. It feels electric, unshakable... almost too perfect. But perfection has its shadows. And Ryle has secrets. Then, just when she believes she’s found her footing, a face from her past reappears—a boy with gentle eyes, a name she tried to forget, and a story that never really ended. As walls crack and truths surface, Lily is forced to confront a question she never wanted to ask:
    How do you know when love should be fought for... and when it should be let go? This is not just a love story.
    It’s a story of choices. Of silence. Of a cycle that must be broken. But not all endings come with closure.
    Some come with a reckoning.
    #ColleenHoover, #ItEndsWithUs, #CoHoBooks, #EmotionalRomance, #ContemporaryFiction, #RomanceBooks, #DomesticDrama, #BookTok, #LilyBloom, #RyleKincaid, #AtlasCorrigan, #LoveAndPain, #ColleenHooverAudiobook, #AudibleRomance, #HeartbreakingReads, #NewYorkTimesBestseller, #WomenFiction, #EmotionalRollercoaster, #MustReadRomance, #ModernLoveStory
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    5 時間 39 分
  • It Ends with by Colleen Hoover complete Audiobook PART1
    2025/05/30
    She thought she had left the past behind.
    A new city. A new life. A chance at something like love. But the heart has a memory, and some scars run deeper than the skin. Lily Bloom is no stranger to pain—but she's also no stranger to hope. When she meets Ryle, a brilliant, assertive neurosurgeon with a troubled gaze and a charming smile, something begins to bloom. It feels electric, unshakable... almost too perfect. But perfection has its shadows. And Ryle has secrets. Then, just when she believes she’s found her footing, a face from her past reappears—a boy with gentle eyes, a name she tried to forget, and a story that never really ended. As walls crack and truths surface, Lily is forced to confront a question she never wanted to ask:
    How do you know when love should be fought for... and when it should be let go? This is not just a love story.
    It’s a story of choices. Of silence. Of a cycle that must be broken. But not all endings come with closure.
    Some come with a reckoning.
    #ColleenHoover, #ItEndsWithUs, #CoHoBooks, #EmotionalRomance, #ContemporaryFiction, #RomanceBooks, #DomesticDrama, #BookTok, #LilyBloom, #RyleKincaid, #AtlasCorrigan, #LoveAndPain, #ColleenHooverAudiobook, #AudibleRomance, #HeartbreakingReads, #NewYorkTimesBestseller, #WomenFiction, #EmotionalRollercoaster, #MustReadRomance, #ModernLoveStory
    続きを読む 一部表示
    5 時間 39 分
  • House of Earth and Blood by Maas Sarah J Complete Audiobook
    2025/05/30
    In the city of Crescent Moon, where angels soar through poisoned skies and demons prowl the shadows of cobblestone streets, something ancient stirs. The air hums with forgotten power. Whispers thread through the alleys—rumors of a darkness long buried, clawing its way to the surface once more. Bryce Quinlan was once just another glittering soul among the night’s endless haze of pleasure and neon. Until the blood came. Until the laughter turned to silence. Now, she walks with ghosts—some that haunt her, others that beg to be avenged. They say she’s reckless. Broken. But what if she’s the only one who can see what lies beneath the glamour? What if the enemy isn’t what it seems... or who? An unlikely ally stands at her side—a warrior shaped in fire and shame, bound by duty, yet hunted by his past. Together, they descend into a city riddled with secrets, chasing the echoes of an unspeakable act, unraveling threads no one dares pull. As the clock ticks and the truth unravels, the question remains:
    What are you willing to lose... to find the truth?
    #SarahJMaas, #HouseOfEarthAndBlood, #CrescentCitySeries, #FantasyRomance, #UrbanFantasy, #Audiobooks, #BryceQuinlan, #HuntAthalar, #MysteriousFantasy, #AngelAndDemonLore, #FaeFiction, #CrescentCityAudiobook, #SteamyFantasy, #FantasyMystery, #StrongFemaleLead, #MagicAndMurder, #EpicFantasyWorld, #AudibleFantasy, #FantasySeries2020s, #NYTBestseller
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    4 時間 31 分
  • CHAPTER 135. The Chase.—Third Day(END)
    2025/05/28
    Moby Dick - Complete Synopsis Herman Melville's "Moby Dick," published in 1851, stands as one of American literature's most ambitious and complex novels. The story is narrated by Ishmael, a young man who feels compelled to go to sea whenever he finds himself growing grim about the mouth and feeling a damp, drizzly November in his soul. This restless spirit leads him from Manhattan to New Bedford, Massachusetts, where he plans to sign aboard a whaling vessel. In New Bedford, Ishmael meets Queequeg, a Polynesian harpooner covered in tattoos and initially appearing quite savage to the civilized young man. Despite their cultural differences and Ishmael's initial fears, the two men quickly become close friends, bound by mutual respect and an almost mystical connection. Queequeg, despite his intimidating appearance, proves to be noble, generous, and deeply spiritual. Their friendship becomes one of the novel's most touching elements, representing a bridge between different worlds and cultures. The pair travels to Nantucket, the great whaling port, where they sign aboard the Pequod, a ship that has seen better days but remains seaworthy. The Pequod is described in detail by Melville, its weathered planks and whalebone decorations telling the story of countless voyages and battles with the great leviathans of the deep. The ship's owners, Peleg and Bildad, are quintessential Nantucketers - shrewd, religious, and shaped by decades in the whaling business. Captain Ahab, the Pequod's commander, remains mysteriously absent during the initial preparations for the voyage. When he finally emerges from his cabin days into the journey, he reveals himself to be a figure of terrible intensity and obsession. Ahab is physically marked by his encounters with the sea - his leg has been taken by a white whale, replaced by a prosthetic made from whalebone. But more significantly, he is spiritually and psychologically scarred, consumed by a monomaniacal desire for revenge against the creature that maimed him: Moby Dick, the legendary white sperm whale. Ahab's obsession with Moby Dick transcends mere personal vendetta. For him, the white whale represents all the malevolent forces of the universe, all the inexplicable evil and suffering that plague humanity. In Ahab's tortured mind, Moby Dick becomes a symbol of everything that is wrong with existence itself. His quest for the whale is thus transformed from a simple hunting expedition into a cosmic battle between man and the darker forces of nature and fate. The crew of the Pequod is a diverse collection of men from around the world, reflecting the international character of the American whaling industry. There's Starbuck, the thoughtful and religious first mate from Nantucket, who represents conventional morality and practical wisdom. He serves as Ahab's primary foil, often questioning the captain's increasingly dangerous obsession. Flask, the third mate, is more carefree and sees whaling as simply a job to be done. Stubb, the second mate, maintains an almost supernatural cheerfulness in the face of danger. Among the harpooners, besides Queequeg, are Tashtego, a Native American from Martha's Vineyard, and Daggoo, an imposing African whose physical presence matches his skill with the harpoon. These men, along with the diverse crew of sailors, create a microcosm of humanity aboard the Pequod, each bringing their own perspectives, skills, and backgrounds to the dangerous work of whaling. As the Pequod sails further from home waters, Melville interrupts the narrative with extensive chapters devoted to the biology, behavior, and cultural significance of whales. These passages, while sometimes criticized as digressions, serve multiple purposes. They demonstrate Melville's extensive research into whaling and marine biology, they provide authentic detail that grounds the fantastic elements of the story in reality, and they elevate the whale from mere animal to a creature of almost mythological significance. The process of whaling itself is described in meticulous detail. Melville explains how whales are spotted, pursued, killed, and processed. The dangers involved are made vivid - small boats launched from the mother ship to chase creatures many times their size, harpooners standing in the bow ready to strike, the chaos and violence of the kill, and the laborious process of harvesting oil and other valuable materials from the carcass. These scenes serve to emphasize both the courage required for such work and the inherent violence of humanity's relationship with nature. Throughout the voyage, the Pequod encounters other whaling ships, and these meetings provide opportunities for "gams" - social visits where crews exchange news, mail, and stories. Each encounter also allows Ahab to inquire about Moby Dick, gradually building a picture of the white whale's movements and reputation. Some captains report narrow escapes from the creature, others speak of vessels destroyed or men killed. These...
    続きを読む 一部表示
    25 分
  • CHAPTER 134. The Chase—Second Day
    2025/05/28
    Moby Dick - Complete Synopsis Herman Melville's "Moby Dick," published in 1851, stands as one of American literature's most ambitious and complex novels. The story is narrated by Ishmael, a young man who feels compelled to go to sea whenever he finds himself growing grim about the mouth and feeling a damp, drizzly November in his soul. This restless spirit leads him from Manhattan to New Bedford, Massachusetts, where he plans to sign aboard a whaling vessel. In New Bedford, Ishmael meets Queequeg, a Polynesian harpooner covered in tattoos and initially appearing quite savage to the civilized young man. Despite their cultural differences and Ishmael's initial fears, the two men quickly become close friends, bound by mutual respect and an almost mystical connection. Queequeg, despite his intimidating appearance, proves to be noble, generous, and deeply spiritual. Their friendship becomes one of the novel's most touching elements, representing a bridge between different worlds and cultures. The pair travels to Nantucket, the great whaling port, where they sign aboard the Pequod, a ship that has seen better days but remains seaworthy. The Pequod is described in detail by Melville, its weathered planks and whalebone decorations telling the story of countless voyages and battles with the great leviathans of the deep. The ship's owners, Peleg and Bildad, are quintessential Nantucketers - shrewd, religious, and shaped by decades in the whaling business. Captain Ahab, the Pequod's commander, remains mysteriously absent during the initial preparations for the voyage. When he finally emerges from his cabin days into the journey, he reveals himself to be a figure of terrible intensity and obsession. Ahab is physically marked by his encounters with the sea - his leg has been taken by a white whale, replaced by a prosthetic made from whalebone. But more significantly, he is spiritually and psychologically scarred, consumed by a monomaniacal desire for revenge against the creature that maimed him: Moby Dick, the legendary white sperm whale. Ahab's obsession with Moby Dick transcends mere personal vendetta. For him, the white whale represents all the malevolent forces of the universe, all the inexplicable evil and suffering that plague humanity. In Ahab's tortured mind, Moby Dick becomes a symbol of everything that is wrong with existence itself. His quest for the whale is thus transformed from a simple hunting expedition into a cosmic battle between man and the darker forces of nature and fate. The crew of the Pequod is a diverse collection of men from around the world, reflecting the international character of the American whaling industry. There's Starbuck, the thoughtful and religious first mate from Nantucket, who represents conventional morality and practical wisdom. He serves as Ahab's primary foil, often questioning the captain's increasingly dangerous obsession. Flask, the third mate, is more carefree and sees whaling as simply a job to be done. Stubb, the second mate, maintains an almost supernatural cheerfulness in the face of danger. Among the harpooners, besides Queequeg, are Tashtego, a Native American from Martha's Vineyard, and Daggoo, an imposing African whose physical presence matches his skill with the harpoon. These men, along with the diverse crew of sailors, create a microcosm of humanity aboard the Pequod, each bringing their own perspectives, skills, and backgrounds to the dangerous work of whaling. As the Pequod sails further from home waters, Melville interrupts the narrative with extensive chapters devoted to the biology, behavior, and cultural significance of whales. These passages, while sometimes criticized as digressions, serve multiple purposes. They demonstrate Melville's extensive research into whaling and marine biology, they provide authentic detail that grounds the fantastic elements of the story in reality, and they elevate the whale from mere animal to a creature of almost mythological significance. The process of whaling itself is described in meticulous detail. Melville explains how whales are spotted, pursued, killed, and processed. The dangers involved are made vivid - small boats launched from the mother ship to chase creatures many times their size, harpooners standing in the bow ready to strike, the chaos and violence of the kill, and the laborious process of harvesting oil and other valuable materials from the carcass. These scenes serve to emphasize both the courage required for such work and the inherent violence of humanity's relationship with nature. Throughout the voyage, the Pequod encounters other whaling ships, and these meetings provide opportunities for "gams" - social visits where crews exchange news, mail, and stories. Each encounter also allows Ahab to inquire about Moby Dick, gradually building a picture of the white whale's movements and reputation. Some captains report narrow escapes from the creature, others speak of vessels destroyed or men killed. These...
    続きを読む 一部表示
    20 分
  • CHAPTER 132. The Symphony and CHAPTER 133. The Chase—First Day
    2025/05/28
    Moby Dick - Complete Synopsis Herman Melville's "Moby Dick," published in 1851, stands as one of American literature's most ambitious and complex novels. The story is narrated by Ishmael, a young man who feels compelled to go to sea whenever he finds himself growing grim about the mouth and feeling a damp, drizzly November in his soul. This restless spirit leads him from Manhattan to New Bedford, Massachusetts, where he plans to sign aboard a whaling vessel. In New Bedford, Ishmael meets Queequeg, a Polynesian harpooner covered in tattoos and initially appearing quite savage to the civilized young man. Despite their cultural differences and Ishmael's initial fears, the two men quickly become close friends, bound by mutual respect and an almost mystical connection. Queequeg, despite his intimidating appearance, proves to be noble, generous, and deeply spiritual. Their friendship becomes one of the novel's most touching elements, representing a bridge between different worlds and cultures. The pair travels to Nantucket, the great whaling port, where they sign aboard the Pequod, a ship that has seen better days but remains seaworthy. The Pequod is described in detail by Melville, its weathered planks and whalebone decorations telling the story of countless voyages and battles with the great leviathans of the deep. The ship's owners, Peleg and Bildad, are quintessential Nantucketers - shrewd, religious, and shaped by decades in the whaling business. Captain Ahab, the Pequod's commander, remains mysteriously absent during the initial preparations for the voyage. When he finally emerges from his cabin days into the journey, he reveals himself to be a figure of terrible intensity and obsession. Ahab is physically marked by his encounters with the sea - his leg has been taken by a white whale, replaced by a prosthetic made from whalebone. But more significantly, he is spiritually and psychologically scarred, consumed by a monomaniacal desire for revenge against the creature that maimed him: Moby Dick, the legendary white sperm whale. Ahab's obsession with Moby Dick transcends mere personal vendetta. For him, the white whale represents all the malevolent forces of the universe, all the inexplicable evil and suffering that plague humanity. In Ahab's tortured mind, Moby Dick becomes a symbol of everything that is wrong with existence itself. His quest for the whale is thus transformed from a simple hunting expedition into a cosmic battle between man and the darker forces of nature and fate. The crew of the Pequod is a diverse collection of men from around the world, reflecting the international character of the American whaling industry. There's Starbuck, the thoughtful and religious first mate from Nantucket, who represents conventional morality and practical wisdom. He serves as Ahab's primary foil, often questioning the captain's increasingly dangerous obsession. Flask, the third mate, is more carefree and sees whaling as simply a job to be done. Stubb, the second mate, maintains an almost supernatural cheerfulness in the face of danger. Among the harpooners, besides Queequeg, are Tashtego, a Native American from Martha's Vineyard, and Daggoo, an imposing African whose physical presence matches his skill with the harpoon. These men, along with the diverse crew of sailors, create a microcosm of humanity aboard the Pequod, each bringing their own perspectives, skills, and backgrounds to the dangerous work of whaling. As the Pequod sails further from home waters, Melville interrupts the narrative with extensive chapters devoted to the biology, behavior, and cultural significance of whales. These passages, while sometimes criticized as digressions, serve multiple purposes. They demonstrate Melville's extensive research into whaling and marine biology, they provide authentic detail that grounds the fantastic elements of the story in reality, and they elevate the whale from mere animal to a creature of almost mythological significance. The process of whaling itself is described in meticulous detail. Melville explains how whales are spotted, pursued, killed, and processed. The dangers involved are made vivid - small boats launched from the mother ship to chase creatures many times their size, harpooners standing in the bow ready to strike, the chaos and violence of the kill, and the laborious process of harvesting oil and other valuable materials from the carcass. These scenes serve to emphasize both the courage required for such work and the inherent violence of humanity's relationship with nature. Throughout the voyage, the Pequod encounters other whaling ships, and these meetings provide opportunities for "gams" - social visits where crews exchange news, mail, and stories. Each encounter also allows Ahab to inquire about Moby Dick, gradually building a picture of the white whale's movements and reputation. Some captains report narrow escapes from the creature, others speak of vessels destroyed or men killed. These...
    続きを読む 一部表示
    29 分