Chapter by Chapter — The Lost Library

The Great Gatsby - Chapter Seven | Full Audiobook

56 min · 13 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio The Great Gatsby - Chapter Seven | Full Audiobook

Descripción

In Chapter Seven, everything breaks at once. The parties are over. Gatsby has shut the whole operation down — fired the staff, closed the doors, turned out the lights. The spectacle was never for anyone else. It was always just a beacon for her. And now that she's back, none of it matters anymore. But something has shifted. Tom knows. And on the hottest day of the summer, five people climb into two cars and drive toward New York — and nothing will be the same when they come back. In a stifling suite at the Plaza Hotel, Gatsby finally says it out loud. Your wife doesn't love you. She never did. She loves me. And for one suspended moment, it almost works. But Daisy can't give him the one thing he needs — to erase the past completely. She loved him, yes. But she had loved Tom too. And that single admission is enough to let all the air out of the dream. Then comes the drive home. The yellow car. Myrtle Wilson running into the road toward the wrong people. Gone before anyone could stop it. And the chapter ends with an image that stays with you long after it's over. Gatsby standing alone in the dark outside the Buchanan house, watching a light in Daisy's window. Convinced he's protecting her. While inside, Daisy and Tom sit together at the kitchen table, hands touching, already closing ranks. Nick walks away and leaves him there in the moonlight. Guarding over nothing. Follow the show so you never miss a chapter, and drop a comment with the classic you want us to read next — your suggestion could become our next season.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Chapter by Chapter — The Lost Library!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

76 episodios

episode How Survival Instincts Created Our Monsters artwork

How Survival Instincts Created Our Monsters

Why do demons, dragons, werewolves, and monsters appear in nearly every civilization on Earth? Drawing from Moncure Daniel Conway's Demonology and Devil-Lore, this deep dive explores the surprising evolutionary origins of humanity's darkest myths. From hunger demons and soul-devouring spirits to werewolves, dragons, serpents, and devils, we trace how ancient humans transformed real environmental dangers into supernatural beings. Along the way, we examine the psychology of fear, the origins of religious sacrifice, the evolution of demons and devils, why snakes became universal symbols of evil, how enemy tribes became werewolves, and why dragons emerged as the ultimate fusion of humanity's greatest threats. More than a history of mythology, this is a story about survival, human psychology, anthropology, religion, and the hidden forces that shaped civilization itself. If you enjoy mythology, ancient history, folklore, psychology, anthropology, religious studies, and the evolution of human belief, this episode reveals why the monsters of the past were reflections of the dangers our ancestors faced every day—and why we continue creating new monsters in the modern world.

Ayer20 min
episode How Winners Turn Ancient Gods Into Demons artwork

How Winners Turn Ancient Gods Into Demons

How do beloved gods become monsters? Drawing from Moncure Daniel Conway's Demonology and Devil-Lore, this deep dive explores one of the most fascinating and overlooked transformations in religious history: the process by which victorious civilizations turned the gods of conquered peoples into demons, devils, and monsters. From gargoyles on cathedral rooftops and the demonization of Baal and Beelzebub to the transformation of Norse gods, pagan spirits, fairies, werewolves, and the rise of Satan himself, this episode reveals how power reshapes mythology and rewrites cultural memory. Along the way, we examine religious conquest, theological propaganda, folklore, dualism, the origins of demons, and the psychological need for an ultimate source of evil. More than a history of religion, this is a story about power, identity, storytelling, and how societies create villains. If you enjoy mythology, ancient history, religious history, folklore, anthropology, psychology, and the rise and fall of civilizations, this episode offers a fascinating look at how winners shape the stories future generations inherit.

Ayer20 min
episode From Floating Stomachs to the Devil: The Strange Evolution of Evil artwork

From Floating Stomachs to the Devil: The Strange Evolution of Evil

How did humanity go from fearing giant floating stomachs in the sky to believing in the Devil? Drawing from Moncure Daniel Conway's classic work Demonology and Devil-Lore, this deep dive explores the fascinating evolution of evil across human history. From hunger demons, soul-eating spirits, and ancient sacrifice rituals to the political transformation of rival gods into demons and the eventual creation of the theological Devil, this episode traces how human societies explained suffering, misfortune, and moral corruption. Along the way, we explore forgotten myths, the surprising origins of Satan, the degradation of pagan gods like Baal and Loki, the psychology of fear, and why every civilization creates monsters that reflect its deepest anxieties. More than a history of demons and devils, this is a story about human psychology, religion, mythology, and the changing ways people have understood evil for thousands of years. If you enjoy mythology, ancient history, folklore, religious history, anthropology, psychology, and the origins of belief, this episode offers a fascinating journey into one of humanity's oldest questions: where does evil come from?

Ayer19 min
episode Tacitus and the Year of the Four Emperors: How Rome's Greatest Political Illusion Collapsed artwork

Tacitus and the Year of the Four Emperors: How Rome's Greatest Political Illusion Collapsed

Tacitus, the Year of the Four Emperors, Roman history, and the collapse of political legitimacy come together in one of the most revealing episodes of the Roman Empire. After Nero's death in 68 AD, Rome entered a period of chaos that exposed a terrifying truth: the Senate did not rule the empire, and perhaps never truly had. Drawing from Tacitus' Histories, this deep dive explores how Galba, Otho, Vitellius, and Vespasian fought for power during a year that shattered Rome's greatest political illusion. Along the way, we examine military corruption, the rise of kingmaker armies, the collapse of constitutional authority, the psychology of leadership, and the fragile foundations that hold civilizations together. More than a story about Ancient Rome, this is a timeless study of power, legitimacy, civic virtue, institutional failure, and what happens when the gap between appearance and reality becomes impossible to ignore. Whether you're interested in Roman history, Ancient Rome documentaries, political philosophy, military history, leadership, or the rise and fall of empires, Tacitus offers lessons that remain strikingly relevant in the modern world.

Ayer19 min
episode The Coup That Exposed Rome's Biggest Secret artwork

The Coup That Exposed Rome's Biggest Secret

How did two ordinary soldiers help decide the fate of the Roman Empire? In this deep dive into Tacitus' Histories, we explore the chaotic Year of the Four Emperors, when Rome's political system collapsed after the death of Nero and power became a commodity to be bought, sold, and traded. Through the rise and fall of Galba, Otho, and Vitellius, Tacitus reveals how military leverage replaced constitutional legitimacy, how institutions unravel when leaders lose touch with reality, and how a handful of individuals can change the course of history. From political assassinations and military coups to propaganda, misinformation, and civil war, this episode examines one of the most dangerous moments in Roman history and the timeless lessons it offers about leadership, power, legitimacy, and organizational collapse. If you enjoy Roman history, Ancient Rome documentaries, political philosophy, military history, leadership analysis, and the rise and fall of civilizations, this story provides one of the clearest explanations of how great institutions can be captured from within and why societies become vulnerable when legitimacy is replaced by raw power.

Ayer20 min