
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.
©1996 Knopf Translation (P)2020 Ukemi Productions LtdThe Masterpiece
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Large chunks of the text could be cut and would not detract from the story.
The narrator over-acts too many of the parts which make listening a wearying experience.
Over-indulgent
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This book is just wonderful. The narrator is amazing. He brings all of the characters to life, he makes all of them stand out individually, and makes them unforgettable. This story moved me in a very special way. I will never forget the experience of listening to it, and the emotions I felt along the way. Thank you to the author and narrator for this beautiful gift.
Best book ever
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David Rintoul deserves an award for his narration.
Highly recommended.
Extraordinary experience
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Set aside plenty of time to enjoy the hours and hours, and hours of the novel’s fascinating exposition of the hermetic life’s of the inhabitants of the International Sanatorium Berghof.
Mann’s ruminations on the nature of time seem especially topical as we live through lockdown.
I hope that we will hear the narrator read more of Mann in the very near future ..... Dr Faustus, please!
A masterpiece and almost perfect audiobook
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Where do I start?
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The breath of life
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The narrator is EXQUISITE
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A philosophical overview of a man’s young life
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There's hardly any point in attempting to counter the avalanche of admiration for the book (widely regarded as a masterpiece and one of the most influential works in German literature) but I have to say I found it to be over-rated.
Mann's glacial pacing and massively ambitious design (a panorama of bourgeois European culture leading to the first world war encapsulated by the goings-on in a socially hermetic Alpine clinic) makes for ponderous read. It's like being lectured at by some worthy, literary show-off.
Clearly a gifted realist of subtlety, nonetheless he seems to be as subject to the pretentions he satirises in his characters as they. I came to dread the appearance of two in particular: self-regarding, sparring 'intellectuals' employed to introduce key cultural concepts of the period. Again and again, their pedantry is painfully depicted to a degree suggesting that the author is quietly promoting literary pedantry as a style. As narrator, he tells you they are pretentious and comic and then demonstrates it in meticulously observed dialogue. Like unfunny variations on the same in-joke.
This farty approach may be intended as a self-effacing send-up of a certain German literary form prevalent at the time and a sort of distancing effect, I don't know, but the upshot is that the reader has to tolerate long stretches of boring discourse which weighs down an already over-long sequence of episodes excused by the pretence of depicting a dislocated temporal situation (resort life in 'magical' suspension).
Hard to admire meticulous description dissecting every little facet of character experience when it's the main thing driving the writing. No matter how skillfully done it becomes tedious. By the final audiobook section download, I struggled waiting for the end. When it came it felt like a predictable slotting-in of a final design component. Very Germanic. So self-consciously profound. So lardy.
The inmates are constantly sitting down to heavy, massively over-rich meals. This novel is like one of those.
If looking for 'a good read' be reminded that masterpieces don't automatically fit the bill. Approach this one with caution because 37 hours is a very long drag. Even with a reader as skilled as David Rintoul.
On the plus side, the production is good.
Paint dries before the war.
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