The Magic Mountain (Modern Library)

by Thomas Mann
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The Magic Mountain
 
by
Thomas Mann
 
published December 7th 1992 by Modern Library
first published 1924
binding Hardcover
isbn 0679600418   (isbn13: 9780679600411)
pages 755
description Mann began working on The Magic Mountain in 1912, following a few weeks' visit to a sanatorium in Switzerland.  Twelve years later the novel ...more
date added
10-07-07



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Thomas
11/29/07

Read in November, 2007
I just finished Thomas Mann's Der Zauberberg (The Magic Mountain, tr. John Woods), and without a doubt it is among the five best works of literature that I have ever read. Covering more than 700 densely-packed pages, it is not for the light of heart, but provides ample reward for the tenacious reader. Published in 1924 and winning the Nobel Prize for literature in 1929, The Magic Mountain should reside on your shelf next to The Brothers Karamazov, The Persian Letters, The Sorrows of Young Werthe...more
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Robkeely
Read in July, 2008
recommends it for: People who like ideas, Catch-22
Two things that helped me read this book.

First, in German there is a tradition in literature called "Bildungsroman," similar to the coming of age archetype in English, focusing on the education of a young hero. In Magic Mountain the education we are confronted with is nothing less than a summation of the entirety of the "long 19th century" and initiation into the new 20th century. Thus we are presented with personification of contrasting ideals; sex, passion, philos, wine...more
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Jim
05/04/08

Read in January, 1996
recommends it for: Those interested in the philosophy of illness and early 20th-century European history.
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Daniel
Daniel is currently reading it (review of isbn 0679772871)
12/17/07

bookshelves: currently-reading
"I don't understand," Hans Castorp said. "I don't understand how someone can not be a smoker - why it's like robbing yourself of the best part of life, so to speak, or at least of an absolutely first rate pleasure. I eat, I look forward to it again, in fact I can honestly say that I actually only eat so that I can smoke, although that's an exaggeration of course. But a day without tobacco - that would be absolutely insipid, a dull, totally wasted day. And if some morning I had to ...more
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purplechick
Read in August, 2008
Wow! I really recommend this particular edition because it is a newer translation and it starts with an introduction by A.S. Byatt. I found the introduction really helpful in that it gave me an idea of what to expect. It was also really useful to read it again after finishing the book.

The Magic Mountainis like a mash-up of Jane Austen for Germans, a classic Bildungsroman and Milton's Paradise Lost with a little magical feeling thrown in for good measure. It can be read as a...more
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Michael
Read in June, 2008
Unusual and yet classic, in the same way Moby-Dick wraps an epic seafaring adventure around a digressive, encyclopedic treatise on whales. Mann's achievement might be more important, however, for attempting a complete psychological, historical, philosophical, aesthetic, religious, biological, mystical, astrological, and seasonal understanding of mankind at the brink of the catastrophe of World War I. The Magic Mountain is therefore utterly exhausting, sometimes agonizingly frustrat...more
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Núria
12/19/07

bookshelves: owned
Read in January, 2002
Leer 'La montaña mágica' fue todo un tour de force, pero valió la pena, aunque dudo que repita la experiencia. Cierto que hay pasajes a los que mi limitada mente no llega y cierto que hay ratos en que se me hizo pesada, pero hay fragmentos de una belleza admirable. Y al fin y al cabo se trata de un libro que critica la abulia de la sociedad burguesa y retrata como un grupo de personas se refugian en un mundo donde no hay las responsabilidades que existen en el mundo real. Hans Castorp nunca m...more
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Adam
03/04/08

Read in March, 2008
I have started this book again, but have gotten a horrible yellow edition (WOW!) Since I left my other current read at work. I started this about a year ago, but the book is so massive that I had to take it back to the library before I could finish it.

I'll be reading this for awhile, not only because it's long (though I've read longer, faster) but because I am so enamored of it that I am reading it almost to the point of making my own annotated edition. The writing is magnificent (partic...more
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Rob
06/23/08

Read in May, 2008
This was a very long read and definitely needed some editing. I was struggling a bit since there are fairly long passages that are pretty tedious - many pages at a time. I enjoyed the book better when I started "flipping" thru these passages - in general something I rarely do, but really needed to be done in this case.

Despite the above shortcomings, I very much enjoyed the book as a whole - I found it very interesting and I sensed it could very well be a truly "great" ...more
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Ben
09/20/07

bookshelves: all-time-faves
Read in November, 2003
The Magic Mountain is a meditation on humanity. And reading it is not unlike meditating. You are taken up to the magic mountain with Hans Castorp, a thoroughly average guy, to explore the reaches of human experience - philosophy, love, art, music, culture. Time slips away. The whole of human experience is made to feel like a long drawn-out Sunday afternoon, not entirely pleasant but not unpleasant. In a word, sedated. And then the war comes and the world awakes from its slumber. It's a novel of ...more
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Debra
04/29/08

Read in January, 2008
Re-reading The Magic Mountain again, since I first read it in my 20's, has been a revelation in all the details I know I must have missed, all the history and political references I did not yet understand, and the whole notion of a Zeitroman which has become one of my favorite forms of literature. Telling of time passing is extraordinary and Mann's method is so calm, so unassuming and yet draws one into the peculiar time-space of der Zauberberg. My favorite chapter is 'Snow'---as I am explorin...more
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matt
02/20/08

bookshelves: fictions-of-the-big-it, worldly-lit
Read in May, 2004

If you give this book a chance, and some long quiet hours with your full attention, you will be in the midst of incredible richness.

Wise, erudite, deeply engaged but titanically remote, grand, magisterial, ironic, cosmipolitan, comic in a sly gently mocking way.

They don't write 'em like this anymore. the title is onomatpoeic. The book itself is mountainous....some of the deepest philosophical prophecy on what the 20th Century was, and would become. The characters are allegorical, tr...more
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Yelena
10/01/07

Read in February, 1998
recommends it for: Masochists
I could only pick one year for when I read this book, but the truth is that I started it in 1991 and read 100 pages every year until I finished the damn thing in 1998.

This book was horrific. There was no point, no enjoyment, no anything save for a harrowing description, 900 pages in length, of some sad sack in a tuberculosis sanitarium. The only reason I even finished the book was that I refused to let it defeat me.

It wasn't until a friend I respect above all others urged me, pleaded wi...more
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Amy
06/28/08

Read in March, 1994
This was required reading in my college days and the first 100 pages or so nearly killed me -- thanks to the mealy-mouthed middle class hero, Hans Castorp -- German bourgeois everyman. Trudging through I came to love him (and recognized my hatred as a form of thinly veiled self-loathing ).

If you can't vacation for a year or so in the Swiss Alps at mountain top resort, read this and become a temporary resident of the Berghof sanatorium. You'll become immersed in the world of sweet ignorant l...more
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Rich
01/26/08

Read in January, 2008
Meshing and weaving symbolism and realism on every page, Thomas Mann's famous novel of a sick, decadent Europe before the Great War seems to sum up his grim view of the entire West. Not only was the war inevitable, it was deserved.

The philosophical debates between Settembrinin and Naphta battling for young Hans Castorp's soul make up the core of the novel, but in the end they are rendered folly and meaningless. There is Mann's ironic twist, with a hard dark bite. Hans Castorp dedicates seve...more
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Richard
bookshelves: currently-reading
Read in June, 2008
recommends it for: People who like beautiful prose.
I'm still navigating my way through this magnificent book. It's so good I got two copies, one with the H. Lowe Porter translation, one by John Woods. The prose is so delightful that I'm going be dumbstruck when I finish it. To that end, I've bought 'Joseph and his Brothers' and 'Buddenbrooks' just so I can continue reading Mann.

It's the type of book where you just want to luxuriate in the writing, the ideas and the experience of the reading.

The different translations are fascinating too...more
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Mariya
06/09/08

Read in June, 2008
This book was time-consuming. It was divided into seven chapters, and, for me, two parts. The first 500 pages (5 chapters) were almost intolerable to get through. On page 100, a realization of - "wait a tick; I've read this before! it was called 'Death in Venice'" - came to me. It was Death in Venice stretched out over 500 pages. Same obsession with a little Russian boy - from (I think his name was) Tazio to the Pribislav reincarnation in Clavdia; same illness, quarantined isolation (r...more
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Stefani
Read in July, 2000
Another one I read again and again. Do I really have to explain why this is a great book? Around a thousand bold pages dissecting humanity within the microcosmos of a Swiss sanatorium, a heap of details and backstory as heavy as the surrounding mountain range, and yet through it all Mann's fine, detached irony sings in the background like a tense wire. This is pure, omniscent genius, and huge fun to read. The ending, aptly titled "Thunderclap," puts an end to the detached commentary, a...more
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Avital
08/16/07

bookshelves: german
I didn't enjoy reading it, especially not when Hans Kastorp proved that time is relative, and when you stay in a clinic seven years more than you originally meant to, it passes slower than possible. Against this magic mountain where time stops, streams the rational world, without magic and music, offering life, which is more than the magic mountain allows.
It's said that Thomas Mann meant to warn Germany from going into war.
(As you know, this is why Germany decided not to go into war, the ...more
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John
10/16/07

Read in October, 2006
recommends it for: Literary readers, readers with a serious illness, psychology readers
I've spent the last thirteen years in a state of perpetual pain due to a neuromuscular condition. Often the condition and the life it's forced me to lead make me feel insane, or at least sane but detached from the world. No book has quite captured the detachment sickness causes like Magic Mountain, so much so that I was convinced Mann must have been using his thin fantasy premise of a mountain away from time as a wedge to get into this mindset. It's not an entertaining read; often it's as...more
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 4.18 (1039 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 0.00 (0 ratings)
number of reviews: 139






other editions

The Magic Mountain (Vintage International)
Der Zauberberg (Paperback)
The Magic Mountain (Everyman's Library)