
Most inspiring novel ever written, if you love life!
2 of 2 people found this review helpful.
If you like an action novel with adult-size,
believable heroes, living in the same world you live
in...and, at the same time, the kind of story which
makes you re-think every idea you've ever heard or
lived your life by...you'll love Atlas Shrugged.
In it, you'll meet Dagny Taggart a woman who runs a
continental railroad. You'll meet Francisco Domingo
Carlos Andres Sebastian de Anconia, the latest heir of
a worldwide copper empire, which he blows up,
appearing to become a worthless playboy, for a reason
you can't even guess for 2/3 of the novel. You'll meet
Hank Rearden, the archetypical self-made
industrialist, who invents a totally new kind of
metal, lighter and stronger than steel. He cannot
understand why, not only his country, but also his
family do not appreciate his creativity and
productivity. He discovers why, over the course of the
novel, the clash between two very opposite moral
codes. You'll meet Ragnar Danneskjold, a modern-day,
high-seas pirate, who highjacks American cargo ships
carrying relief to the failed People's Socialist
Paradises around the world. He sells off the cargo for
gold, which he uses to reimburse people's income tax
to them. And the main character? Him you don't get to
meet until 2/3s of the way into the novel. And when
you do, you'll have several emotional reactions. one
of which is, you may laugh your head off, because
you'll realize that the author has laid clues about
this character from the first sentence all the way
through. This character has let a plot loose in the
world of the novel, which will change the world, and
you may wish it were happening in your world. And, his
reasons will astound you.
Those reasons will also cause you to see yourself
differently. They'll cause you to understand the
people around you in a whole different way. They'll
cause you to see the world around you in a new way
and, once you do, you won't be able to go back to your
original way of seeing it.
This is not the kind of novel, after which you've read
it that you can barely remember the names of the
characters. You'll remember these people for the rest
of your life and see them all around you, in the best
and worst of the characters of the people you know.
The life of the author was as adventurous as all her
novels. She was raised in Russia, under the communists
and managed to get out of there when she was 21. She
came to America, the country she said was founded on
her moral principles. She went to Hollywood, hoping to
write screenplays, met Cecil B. DeMille, who got her
started. She wrote the American classic novel, The
Fountainhead, which they turned into a movie, starring
Gary Cooper and Patricia Neal. Then, as the result of
13 years of thought and intensive writing, she
produced Atlas Shrugged, the book which continues to
inspire the love of life and intellectual curiosity of
millions of young people, many of whom are becoming
the intellectuals who are reshaping the world. Later,
came her non-fiction books in which she established
herself as a history-changing philsopher.
The recommendation of any of her books comes with a
warning. She portrays characters doing the unusual,
describes physical scenes like a painter paints, and
solves age-old problems in technical philosophy...in
pure, crystal-clear English. You'll be seduced to read
and read. So, the warning is, be sure to eat, drink
and sleep between sections of chapters. www.aynrand.org
Review ID: 10000000003721491

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