Three Plays

by Ayn Rand

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Published together for the first time are three of Ayn Rand's compelling stage plays. The courtroom drama Night of January 16th, a 1935 Broadway success famous for leaving the verdict to the audience, is presented here in its definitive, final revised text-a superb dramatization of Rand's vision of human strengths and weaknesses. Also included are two of Rand's unproduced plays: Think Twice, a clever philosophical murder mystery; and Ideal, a bitter indictment of people's willingness to show more betray their highest values, as symbolized by a Hollywood goddess suspected of a crime and fleeing the authorities. show less

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I finished Night of January 16th on December 7, 2016
I finished Ideal on August 30, 2020
I finished Think Twice on June 12, 2022

January 16th was really good and I also enjoyed Think Twice. I think I would give each of them 4 stars, but Ideal was forgettable. All were murder mysteries. All had not-so-subtle Ayn Rand philosophical undertones.

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Ayn Rand, 1905 - 1982 Novelist and philosopher Ayn Rand was born Alice Rosenbaum on February 2, 1905 in St. Petersburg, Russia. She graduated with highest honors in history from the University of Petrograd in 1924, and she came to the United States in 1926 with dreams of becoming a screenwriter. In 1929, she married actor Charles "Frank" O'Connor. show more After arriving in Hollywood, Rand was spotted by Cecil B. DeMille standing at the gate of his studio and gave her a job as an extra in King of Kings. She also worked as a script reader and a wardrobe girl and, in 1932, she sold Red Pawn to Universal Studios. In the 1950's, she returned to New York City where she hosted a Saturday night group she called "the collective." It was also during this time that Rand received a fan letter from a young man, Nathaniel Branden. She was impressed with his letter, and she wrote him back. Her correspondence with him eventually led to an affair that lasted over a decade. He became her chief spokesperson and codified the principles of her novels into a strict philosophical system (objectivism) and founded an institute bearing his name. Their affair ended in 1968 when Branden got involved with another one of Rand's disciples. According to Rand, people are inherently selfish and act only out of personal interest making a selfish act, a rational one. It is from this belief that her characters play out their lives. Rand's first novel was "We the Living" (1936) and was followed by "Anthem" (1938), "The Fountainhead" (1943), and "Atlas Shrugged" (1957). All four of her novels made the top ten of the controversial list of the 100 Best Novels of the 20th Century. On March 6, 1982, Ayn Rand died in her New York City apartment. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Genre
Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
812Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican drama in English
LCC
PS3535 .A547 .A6Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1900-1960
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ISBNs
10
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1