
The Magic Mountain
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Narrated by:
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David Rintoul
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By:
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Thomas Mann
About this listen
It was The Magic Mountain (Der Zauberberg) that confirmed Thomas Mann as a Nobel prizewinner for literature and rightly so, for it is undoubtedly one of the great novels of the 20th century.
Its unusual story - it opens with a young man visiting a friend in a tuberculosis sanatorium in the Swiss Alps - was originally started by Mann in 1912 but was not completed until 1924. Then, it was instantly recognised as a masterpiece and led to Mann’s Nobel Prize in 1929.
Hans Castorp is, on the face of it, an ordinary man in his early 20s, on course to start a career in ship engineering in his home town of Hamburg, when he decides to travel to the Berghof Santatorium in Davos. The year is 1912, and an oblivious world is on the brink of war. Castorp’s friend Joachim Ziemssen is taking the cure, and a three-week visit seems a perfect break before work begins. But when Castorp arrives he is surprised to find an established community of patients, some of whom have been there for years, and little by little, he gets drawn into the closeted life and the individual personalities of the residents.
Among them are Hofrat Behrens, the principal doctor, the curiously attractive Clavdia Chauchat and two intellectuals: Ludovico Settembrini and Leo Naphta with their strongly contrasted personalities and differing political, ethical, artistic and spiritual ideals. Hans Castorp’s stay is extended, once, twice and still further, as he appears to develop symptoms which suggest that his health, once so robust, would benefit from the treatments and the mountain air.
As time passes, it becomes clear that the young man, with a particular interest in shipbuilding and not much else, finds his outlook and knowledge broadened by his mountain companions, his intellect stretched and his emotional experience deepened and enriched. Hans Castorp is changing, day by day, month by month, year by year, sometimes imperceptibly, sometimes with a sudden advance, as he encounters the varied range of sparkling characters, their comedies and tragedies, their aspirations and their defeats.
The Magic Mountain is a classic bildungsroman, an educational journey of growth - a genre that began with an earlier novel in the German tradition: Goethe’s Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship. It is presented here in the acclaimed modern translation by John E. Woods and is told by David Rintoul with his particular understanding for Thomas Mann as displayed in his widely praised Ukemi recording of Buddenbrooks.
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- Length: 38 hrs and 7 mins
- Unabridged
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John Galsworthy's magnificent trilogy of power and passion chronicles the wealthy Forsyte family. As the disintegrating values of the Victorian era progress to World War I and the political uncertainty of the 1930s, the family's material and emotional struggles are set within the dwindling status of the affluent middle-classes.
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Tiring
- By marsha nunley on 04-29-21
By: John Galsworthy
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Sentimental Education
- By: Gustave Flaubert
- Narrated by: Michael Maloney
- Length: 15 hrs and 21 mins
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Frederic Moreau is a law student returning home to Normandy from Paris when he first notices Mme Arnoux, a slender, dark woman several years older than himself. It is the beginning of an infatuation that will last a lifetime. He befriends her husband, an influential businessman, and their paths cross and re-cross over the years. Through financial upheaval, political turmoil, and countless affairs, Mme Arnoux remains the constant, unattainable love of Moreau’s life.
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When Crimes of Passion Were All the Fashion
- By W Perry Hall on 03-12-17
By: Gustave Flaubert
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Bel Ami
- By: Guy de Maupassant
- Narrated by: John McDonough
- Length: 14 hrs and 37 mins
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Guy de Maupassant is revered for his naturalistic fiction, which brilliantly captures flesh-and-blood characters as it evokes the most telling details of everyday life. Considered one of the finest French novels ever written, Bel Ami follows journalist Georges Duroy and his increasing stature among the Paris elite. With an immense thirst for power, Georges is not above an almost gleeful use of wealthy mistresses to achieve his ends.
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Bel Ami or how to socially climb in 1885 Paris
- By Neil Chisholm on 12-03-13
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Crome Yellow
- By: Aldous Huxley
- Narrated by: Robert Whitfield
- Length: 5 hrs and 55 mins
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One of the greatest prose writers and social commentators of the 20th century, Aldous Huxley here introduces us to a delightfully cynical, comic, and severe group of artists and intellectuals engaged in the most free-thinking and modern kind of talk imaginable. Poetry, occultism, ancestral history, and Italian primitive painting are just a few of the subjects competing for discussion among the amiable cast of eccentrics drawn together at Crome, an intensely English country manor.
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Bloomsbury in a blender, 1922
- By Adeliese Baumann on 01-02-17
By: Aldous Huxley
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Nausea (New Directions Paperbook)
- By: Jean-Paul Sartre
- Narrated by: Edoardo Ballerini
- Length: 8 hrs and 12 mins
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Sartre's greatest novel and existentialism's key text, now introduced by James Wood, and read by the inimitable Edoardo Ballerini. Nausea is the story of Antoine Roquentin, a French writer who is horrified at his own existence. In impressionistic, diary form, he ruthlessly catalogs his every feeling and sensation.
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Glad to have existed to enjoy reading this book!
- By mohammed on 08-11-21
By: Jean-Paul Sartre
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The Man Without Qualities
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- Narrated by: John Telfer
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In 1913, the Viennese aristocracy is gathering to celebrate the 17th jubilee of the accession of Emperor Franz Josef, even as the Austro-Hungarian Empire is collapsing and the rest of Vienna is showing signs of rebellion. At the centre of this social labyrinth is Ulrich: a veteran, a seducer and a scientist, yet also a man 'without qualities' and therefore a brilliant and detached observer of his changing world.
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An unmatched intellectual epic
- By Delano on 06-23-22
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Steppenwolf
- By: Hermann Hesse
- Narrated by: Peter Weller
- Length: 7 hrs and 41 mins
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Harry Haller is a sad and lonely figure, a reclusive intellectual for whom life holds no joy. He struggles to reconcile the wild primeval wolf and the rational man within himself without surrendering to the bourgeois values he despises. His life changes dramatically when he meets a woman who is his opposite, the carefree and elusive Hermine.
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Save this Hesse novel for your midlife crisis.
- By Darwin8u on 03-02-14
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The Age of Innocence
- By: Edith Wharton
- Narrated by: David Horovitch
- Length: 12 hrs and 5 mins
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Countess Ellen Olenska, separated from her European husband, returns to old New York society. She bears with her an independence and an awareness of life which stirs the educated sensitivity of the charming Newland Archer, engaged to be married to her cousin, May Welland. Though he accepts the society's standards and rules he is acutely aware of their limitations. He knows May will assure him a conventional future but Ellen, scandalously separated from her husband, forces Archer to question his values and beliefs.
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Narrated to Perfection
- By Ilana on 09-18-12
By: Edith Wharton
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Night and Day
- By: Virginia Woolf
- Narrated by: Juliet Stevenson
- Length: 18 hrs and 57 mins
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Written before she began her experiments in the writing of fiction, Virginia Woolf's second novel, Night and Day, is a story about a group of young people trying to discover what it means to fall in love. It asks all the big questions: What does it mean to fall in love? Does marriage grant happiness? What is happiness? Night and Day is a conventional novel; however, it maps out for us the world of Virginia Woolf in its wondrous prose: For her it was the beginning, leading on to a prolonged engagement with her search for the means to express the "inner life".
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"After all, what is love?"
- By Eman Abd Allah on 12-13-16
By: Virginia Woolf
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The Setting Sun
- New Directions Book
- By: Osamu Dazai
- Narrated by: June Angela
- Length: 4 hrs and 28 mins
- Unabridged
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Set in the early postwar years, it probes the destructive effects of war and the transition from a feudal Japan to an industrial society. Ozamu Dazai died, a suicide, in 1948. But the influence of his book has made "people of the setting sun" a permanent part of the Japanese language, and his heroine, Kazuko, a young aristocrat who deliberately abandons her class, a symbol of the anomie which pervades so much of the modern world.
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MORE OSAMU DAZAI TRANSLATIONS PLEASE!!!!!
- By Lucky on 10-19-22
By: Osamu Dazai
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Death in Venice
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Published on the eve of World War I, a decade after Buddenbrooks had established Thomas Mann as a literary celebrity, Death in Venice tells the story of Gustave von Aschenbach, a successful but aging writer who follows his wanderlust to Venice in search of spiritual fulfillment that instead leads to his erotic doom.
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Brilliant gem
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Chapters missing, divisions make no sense
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In seinem ersten Roman Buddenbrooks erzählt Thomas Mann nur wenig verschlüsselt die Geschichte seiner Familie und ihrer Stellung in der Vaterstadt Lübeck, soweit er sie nachvollziehen, in Einzelheiten überblicken konnte, ja sogar noch miterlebt hat. Verwandte, Honoratioren und markante Persönlichkeiten seiner Jugend werden integriert. Es ist die Geschichte des langsamen Niedergangs einer reichen Kaufmannsfamilie über vier Generationen hinweg. Auch mehr als hundert Jahren nach seinem ersten Erscheinen hat der Roman nichts an Charme und Aktualität eingebüßt.
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In 1913, the Viennese aristocracy is gathering to celebrate the 17th jubilee of the accession of Emperor Franz Josef, even as the Austro-Hungarian Empire is collapsing and the rest of Vienna is showing signs of rebellion. At the centre of this social labyrinth is Ulrich: a veteran, a seducer and a scientist, yet also a man 'without qualities' and therefore a brilliant and detached observer of his changing world.
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They Marched Into Sunlight
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Here is the epic story of Vietnam and the sixties told through the events of a few tumultuous days in October 1967. With meticulous and captivating detail, They Marched Into Sunlight brings that catastrophic time back to life while examining questions about the meaning of dissent and the official manipulation of truth, issues that are as relevant today as they were decades ago.
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Overwhelming
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It is 1659 and Mary Newbury, theyoung granddaughter of a witch, sees her wise and beloved grandmother tortured and hanged as a servant of the Devil. Then a stranger with hauntingly familiar eyes approaches her with an opportunity - safe passage to America. But the difficult ocean voyage only leads her to a community of inflexible, fearful grownups who try to decide for her who and what she will be. Mary must disguise herself as a pious Puritan girl, hiding her true nature, or else face terrible danger once again.
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Do Not Suffer a Witch to Live Among You
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Death in Venice
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Published on the eve of World War I, a decade after Buddenbrooks had established Thomas Mann as a literary celebrity, Death in Venice tells the story of Gustav von Aschenbach, a successful but aging writer who follows his wanderlust to Venice in search of spiritual fulfillment that instead leads to his erotic doom.
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Dem Leben so fern: der Klassiker als Mammuthörspiel. Der junge Hans Castorp will seinen lungenkranken Vetter eigentlich nur drei Wochen im Schweizerischen Sanatorium besuchen. Dort eingelebt, wird er selbst zum Behandlungsfall. Fasziniert von der morbiden Stimmung bleibt Castorp sieben Jahre lang im Reich der Zeitentrückten, umgeben von todkranken Aufklärern, Hedonisten, Hypochondern und einer russischen Schönheit.
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Pooraudio quality
- By Eva Madden on 02-24-24
By: Thomas Mann, and others
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Reflections of a Nonpolitical Man
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When the Great War broke out in August 1914, Thomas Mann, like so many people on both sides of the conflict, was exhilarated. Finally, the era of decadence that he had anatomized in Death in Venice had come to an end; finally, there was a cause worth fighting and even dying for, or, at least when it came to Mann himself, writing about. Mann immediately picked up his pen to compose a paean to the German cause. Soon after, his elder brother and lifelong rival, the novelist Heinrich Mann, responded with a no less determined denunciation.
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The most contradictory book by Thomas Mann
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Faust: Parts I & II
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Grating Performance
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Gulliver's Travels
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Lemuel Gulliver, a slightly staid ship’s doctor, relates the tales of his astonishing travels. He encounters the tiny, warring Lilliputians; the giant, sceptical Brobdingnagians; the ludicrously intellectual Laputans; and the idealistic - if rather stolid - Houyhnhnms and their bestial servants, the Yahoos. An immediate best seller when it was first published in 1726, Gulliver’s Travels has remained a favourite ever since. It was an attack on the politics and society of Swift’s day, but it is also a polemical, inventive, surreal, vitriolic, and wonderfully imaginative masterpiece.
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18th century satirical science fiction for adults
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What listeners say about The Magic Mountain
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- Joel A. Griska
- 07-01-20
Best book ever
This has been one of the best books I ever read- in every way! I will come back to it again and again!
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11 people found this helpful
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- Monica L.
- 07-07-21
unbeatable story teller
David Rintoul is by far the best story teller I have ever listened to.
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4 people found this helpful
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- JRR
- 02-06-21
Extraordinary reading of magical, profound classic
David Rintoul's beautiful, intelligent, ironic-toned, generous hearted narration brings another kind of life to this magical, meaningful, and - yes, humorous, classic. I have been waiting for this audiobook and it exceeds all expectations. At times one just has to stop short at the profound humanity of this novel. Wonderful pandemic or any time listen! Thank you, thank you! DAVID RINTOUL, PLEASE NARRATE MANN"S DR. FAUSTUS, please, please!!!!!
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2 people found this helpful
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- Brentd1
- 07-03-21
Incredible and Long Journey
Great narrator, compelling story, intriguing characters, thought provoking, dive in you will not regret it!
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1 person found this helpful
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- Phil Holcomb
- 09-21-21
I'm in awe.
I've read this novel several times but have only listened to it once--and that was an amazing experience. What struck me most in hearing it is the novel's relevance to both historical and contemporary events. I've thought for a long time that one of the themes of the novel is Mann's attempt to explain his understanding of how the German "Geist" set up the probability of WW1. But the more I thought about this, the more relevance the novel had for me in clarifying fundamental human attitudes so prevalent in our contemporary "Geist." Is the conflict between Setembrini and Naphta, the Jew turned Jesuit, an age-old construct? Is it the modern battle between liberal/humanistic values and those of the darker and more vicious conservative ones? I see this modern problem anticipated in the novel. Mann clearly favors the Italian's attitudes and is consistently horrified at the vicious and dangerous views of Naptha. The Italian favors enlightenment and the betterment of mankind, while Naptha, who dwells on the physical horrors of 13century suffering, favors pain and punishment. The Italian looks forward; Naptha looks back. The penultimate chapter (The Great Petulance) clarifies, for me, both the historical and contemporary problems. But what to do about Pieppercorn? To me he's an unflattering caricature of a Christ-like figure: his power--if that's what it is--resides only in his "personality." None of his comments make sense but he commands the awe of anyone who listens to him. He might be seen as the traditional arbiter between liberal and conservative attitudes, but if that's his role, he's a complete failure. And the war itself: relegated to 5 or 6 pages, almost as if it's an afterthought. There is so much to think about in this most impressive of books. To me, it's the greatest book I've ever read.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Rene
- 02-11-23
Top quality
This story was satisfying on many levels. The discussion of time and space in addition to philosophy, religion and history. Anyone who enjoys debate would enjoy this book.
The performance was exceptional.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Diana
- 03-08-21
A true masterpiece—why have I waited this long to read it?
Just finished this book. Am 78 years of age and feel a loss in that this is my first reading. Had read Death in Venice in college; however, somehow put this work aside. It won’t be the last time, as I plan to undertake it again in a year or so to revisit and to give it deeper study.
David Rintoul! A superb actor whose narration does this great, huge masterwork justice at every turn.
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- T. Deal
- 11-26-23
One of the Greatest Literary Masterpieces
The Magic Mountain is frequently tedious, verbose, repetitive and pedagogic. Yet a single page of this masterwork contains more truth, wisdom and insight than are contained in entire books of a lesser quality. For example, the concepts of time, morality, illness and death are deftly explored by interweaving philosophical, theological, physical, and metaphysical viewpoints.
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- Brandon
- 09-28-20
Great Book & Great Reader
This is one of the greatest books of all time. This Narrator did a excellent job. Highly recommended
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- Greg
- 03-26-21
A Great Novel with a great narrator
just finished with a hole in my spirit for a great novel ending. This is a first listen to audio while previously having read the novel. Reading was very well done especially considering that Mann, I felt, accepted the role of narrator, easily transferred to Mr. Rantoul. In many ways it was enjoyable spending time on the mountain with Hans and company. Interesting conversation, adventures, comfortable lounge chairs, and beautiful environs. Then there is the dark reality of down below that begins to cover the mountain and enter the spirits of our friends above. Tragedy and horror pulls Hans.back down the mountain and places him within thunder lightening and calculated sacrifice.
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