
In the lofty reaches of a snow‑capped Alpine sanatorium, a young engineer named Hans Castorp finds himself drawn into a world where the ordinary rhythm of life seems suspended. Surrounded by patients and doctors, he becomes obsessed with the nature of time, space, and change, pondering whether movement creates time or vice versa. The novel’s opening immerses the listener in his restless mind, turning the quiet corridors into a laboratory for existential inquiry.
The narrative expands as Castorp’s fellow patient, the disciplined yet increasingly restless Joachim, confronts the harsh reality of the Gaffky scale—a grim measurement of bacterial infection that decides a patient’s fate. Joachim’s outburst against the system reveals the tension between duty, hope, and the looming specter of death that hangs over the mountain. Through richly detailed dialogue and vivid description, the story captures the fragile balance between illness and contemplation, inviting listeners to reflect on their own perceptions of mortality and meaning.
Language
de
Duration
~18 hours (1073K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Jens Sadowski and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2021-06-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1875–1955
Best known for richly layered novels like Buddenbrooks, Death in Venice, and The Magic Mountain, this German writer brought psychological depth and moral tension to stories about family, art, illness, and society. He won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1929 and remains one of the major voices of 20th-century European fiction.
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