Sorus wrote:Lucimay wrote:i've read it too, Fist, as well as Fountainhead. doesn't everybody have an Ayn Rand period? (kinda like a Herman Hesse period)
I think mine lasted about two months; five days to read most of Atlas Shrugged, the remaining time to finish the final hundred or so pages.

Sounds about right!
Sorus wrote:For all that, I do intend to read it again one of these days.
Me too.
The Leper Fairy read
Fountainhead - possibly twice now? - but not yet
Atlas Shrugged. I've tried to talk her into it a couple times.

I can't say how much I love Atlas. I only read it a few years ago, and it taught me a
lot! I thought a non-SRD Dissection would be cool, and Atlas was among the choices I suggested. It got some attention, but it didn't win. (
Dune was chosen, but, alas, there was extremely little participation after the voting.

)
And, with no remorse for what might be considered an attempt to turn this into an
Atlas Shrugged thread, here's a few more great paragraphs.

"I love you. As the same value, as the same expression, with the same pride and the same meaning as I love my work, my mills, my Metal, my hours at a desk, at a furnace, in a laboratory, in an ore mine, as I love my ability to work, as I love the act of sight and knowledge, as I love the action of my mind when it solves a chemical equation or grasps a sunrise, as I love the things I've made and the things I've felt, as my product, as my choice, as a shape of my world, as my best mirror, as the wife I've never had, as that which makes all the rest of it possible: as my power to live."
He was smiling, but she saw the enormous solemnity of that which he and his wife had needed to earn their right to this kind of smile. "She can live through it, Miss Taggart, because we do not hold the belief that this earth is a realm of misery where man is doomed to destruction. We do not think that tragedy is our natural fate and we do not live in chronic dread of disaster. We do not expect disaster until we have specific reason to expect it - and when we encounter it, we are free to fight it. It is not happiness, but suffering that we consider unnatural. It is not success, but calamity that we regard as the abnormal exception in human life."
Somewhere, he thought, there was this boy's mother, who had trembled with protective concern over his groping steps, while teaching him to walk, who had measured his baby formulas with a jeweler's caution, who had obeyed with a zealot's fervor the latest words of science on his diet and hygiene, protecting his unhardened body from germs - then had sent him to be turned into a tortured neurotic by the men who taught him that he had no mind and must never attempt to think. Had she fed him tainted refuse, he thought, had she mixed poison into his food, it would have been more kind and less fatal.
He thought of all the living species that train their young in the art of survival, the cats who teach their kittens to hunt, the birds who spend such strident effort on teaching their fledglings to fly - yet man, whose tool of survival is the mind, does not merely fail to teach a child to think, but devotes the child's education to the purpose of destroying his brain, of convincing him that thought is futile and evil, before he has started to think.