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Loading... Atlas Shruggedby Ayn Rand
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This is probably the longest book I have ever read. If you want to know what happens when the government takes over read this book. All of Ayn Rand books make you think. A generally well written book for a sociopathic ideologue. One of the greatest books of all-time. Rand is a goddess. It's a shame that an opinion about this book is taken as a political statement, because the story's actually really good. In a nutshell: the government decides that competition is unfair and starts regulating trade and production. In response, the producers disappear one by one, abandoning (or destroying) their mines, factories, and mills. Chaos ensues. Our protagonist is Dagny Taggart, head of Taggart Transcontinental Railroad. Objectivist women are evidently hard to find; she had so many admirers I almost wanted to rename the book "Everybody Loves Dagny." But that's neither here nor there (though the sex scenes were a touch disturbing); it is she who struggles to keep her railroad running as increasing government regulation and a decreasing population of competent people bar the way. At times I was reminded of Animal Farm, which is no surprise considering Rand grew up in Bolshevik Russia. What starts with good intentions rapidly devolves into a miasma of bribes, favors, and threats. My favorite character was Francisco d'Anconia, CEO of d'Anconia Copper and childhood friend of Dagny. I just love his snarkiness. Everything he does seems calculated to piss off the looters (so the enemies of individuality are called) while remaining impeccably polite. As an aside, I also found it telling that so many of the looters had ridiculous names, such as Tinky or Chick. I found this story fascinating from an intellectual and philosophical viewpoint. A lot of people seem to treat capitalism as a given (or as the enemy); I've never read such a detailed defense of it. And while I do not purport to completely understand Ayn Rand's philosophy of Objectivism, these are the nuggets I gleaned from this story: * Logic and facts are paramount. * You are entitled to nothing and must earn everything. Needing something - anything - does not entitle you to it. Even food and shelter. * Government involvement in private enterprise screws everything up. * The worst thing is to live a life without purpose. * Every man working in his own self interest ultimately produces the most good for all. I'm not going to go into my own personal philosophy here, but these views definitely made for some interesting reading. Certainly better than The Fountainhead. (Howard Roark struck me as petty.) Once again, this is a book that made me think, and that is always high praise coming from me. I listened to this on (unabridged) audiobook, which I think was the only way I would have gotten through it. Not only is the book incredibly long, the characters spend a lot of time making speeches, most notably John Galt's famous three-hour speech near the end. (Yes, you do learn the answer to "who is John Galt?" in the third section.) These speeches are unquestionably an integral part of the book, both the plot and the philosophical ideals, but they can get a little tiring. On audio they come across much more naturally.
Atlas Shrugged represents a watershed in the history of world literature. [Rand] deserves credit at least for imagination; unfortunately, it is tied to ludicrous naiveté. There could have been something exhilarating about the capitalists' revolt—except for the fact that what Rand presents is not so much capitalism as its hideous caricature. In fact, if her intention were to destroy faith in capitalism, she could not have written a book better suited to the purpose. Perhaps most of us have moments when we feel that it might be a good idea if the whole human race, except for the fes nice people we know, were wiped out; but one wonders about a person who sustains such a mood through the writing of 1,168 pages and some fourteen years of work. Challenging and readable, and quick with suspense... It's a book every businessman should hug to his breast, and the first novel I recall to glorify the dollar mark and the virtue in profit.
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:09 -0400)
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This book will have you seething no matter what your stance. Gotta love it. (