
The Glass Bead Game
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Narrated by:
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David Colacci
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By:
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Hermann Hesse
Since childhood, Knecht has been consumed with mastering the Glass Bead Game, which requires a synthesis of aesthetics and scientific arts, such as mathematics, music, logic, and philosophy, which he achieves in adulthood, becoming a Magister Ludi (Master of the Game).
©1990 Hermann Hesse (P)2008 BBC Audiobooks AmericaListeners also enjoyed...




















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What did you love best about The Glass Bead Game?
The elusiveness of comprehension. The moment one thought one understood the Glass Bead Game another perspective was thrown in. Is it a game or an allegory regarding our pedestrian life?What did you like best about this story?
The use of language is like a beautiful song. The setting - Castalia a utopia for the intellectually gifted. The allusion to homosexuality. For instance, the desirability that some of the boys/men had to knecht and Knecht's strong attractions to some of his acquaintances all presented as asexual encounters.Have you listened to any of David Colacci’s other performances before? How does this one compare?
No I have not, but would like to. I love his voice.Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
No, I listened several chapters at a time.Any additional comments?
Very well done.Brilliant
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fabulous!
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Long and boring
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Written beautifully but deceptive
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It is a book about harmony and the arts. The exploration of how music, mathematics, intellecutalism and life can become transcendent and beautiful. GBG is a mysterious fill-in that allows it to be at once none and all of man's endeavors. It is a holy raga, a tactile masbaha, a literary syncretism, that captures the whole of man's achievements and is practiced by an elite few. Using the framework of the Game Hesse is able to look at the dynamic of all of man's achievements as being both beautiful, worthwhile, but also frivolous and fleeting. He looks at the tension between those who remove themselves from mankind's experiences with those who live IN the world. There is a pull and a reciprocity between these two groups. He is looking for those things that balance those groups and ultimately those things that cause these groups to separate.
The book also explores the (mostly) Eastern ideas of meditation, surrender, loss and renewal. I found these ideas (obviously) beautiful and rewarding, but I'm still not sure if I really liked the structure of the book: Part 1 (pages 7-44): Introduction to GBG; Part 2 (Pages 45-427): Magister Ludi's story; Part 3 (428-445): Magister Ludi's poems; Part 4 (446-558): The Three Lives (other incarnations of Magister Ludi). I'm just not sure if the structure worked for me. It did well enough, but I loved and hated it too. Maybe that was Hesse's intention. The first part was a parody of those 'history of the saints' that appear so often and so frequently in all religious traditions. It was interesting, but just didn't mix well with the final parts of the novel. I did like having Knecht's (re)incarnations be outside of time. While Magister Ludi was set in the future, the other incarnations of Magister Ludi were more likely from the past. An interesting construct, but the weight of the last was too little for the heavy front.
But all measured out these are frivolous issues. For the most part, I really liked the book. It is incredible that in the face of WWII and Nazi Germany Hesse could write this. History and inevitable burning push of evil must have seemed dark and heavy, but ultimately this book (written from 1931 to 1943) contains the germs of peace and tranquility. I think that peace comes from the idea of a spiritual retreat (a common theme) and surrender. Hesse wasn't saying to run from Evil, although he did himself leave Nazi Germany. But I think his book was communicating the ability to find peace through surrendering to one's own situation and place in the universe. GBG one day will disappear, but so too ONE DAY will fascism and evil, because all of man's creation is a game. So, surrender to the game and surrender to the universe.
Surrender to the Magister Ludi's Game
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A complicated book to over simplify life
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Language, depth, becoming
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A wonderfully contemplative book
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Taking too long to figure out what the book is abt
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Revisiting this book as a, let’s say, more experienced person I love it!
Joseph moves through his life focused on perfecting the high intellectual objective of the glass bead game. Naming and categorizing all the beautiful shiny things in the world. Linking and binding ideas, music and images... fileing and arranging them and creating a new beauty. But where does his true joy and fulfillment lay?
The Indian life is my favorite part.
I’m glad I revisited this gem.
“AUDIBLE 20 REVIEW SWEEPSTAKES ENTRY”
From loving the light to being the light
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