Selected Product: | The Fountainhead (Centennial Edition Hardcover) Hardcover Author: Ayn Rand Publisher: Plume Release Date: 2005-04-26 ISBN-10: 0452286751 ISBN-13: 9780452286757 List Price: $39.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Atlas Shrugged ISBN-10: 0452011876 ISBN-13: 9780452011878 List Price:$23.00 Atlas Shrugged (Centennial Ed. HC) ISBN-10: 0525948929 ISBN-13: 9780525948926 List Price:$39.95 The Virtue of Selfishness ISBN-10: 0451163931 ISBN-13: 9780451163936 List Price:$7.99 We the Living ISBN-10: 0451187849 ISBN-13: 9780451187840 List Price:$7.99 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Fountainhead (Centennial Edition Hardcover) by Ayn Rand (ISBN-10: 0452286751, ISBN-13: 9780452286757). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Fountainhead (Centennial Edition Hardcover) by Ayn Rand (ISBN-10: 0452286751, ISBN-13: 9780452286757). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com A special edition hardcover in celebration of Ayn Rand’s centennial. When it was first published in 1943, The Fountainhead--containing Ayn Rand’s daringly original literary vision with the seeds of her groundbreaking philosophy, Objectivism—won immediate worldwide acclaim. This instant classic is the story of an intransigent young architect, his violent battle against conventional standards, and his explosive love affair with a beautiful woman who struggles to defeat him. This centennial edition of The Fountainhead, celebrating the controversial and eduring legacy of its author, features an afterword by Rand’s literary executor, Leonard Peikoff, offering some of Ayn Rand’s personal notes on the development of her masterwork. “A writer of great power. She has a subtle and ingenious mind and the capacity of writing brilliantly, beautifully, bitterly.” --The New York Times "But I don't think of you" | Customer Rating: | | I'm not quite sure how she pulled it off, but with The Fountainhead, Ayn Rand managed to forge a literary masterpiece out of reheated libertarianism, stone age sexual politics, and dialogue that's so full of grandiose monologuing it would make William Shakespeare blush. I'm not being tongue-in-cheek here; I really do love this novel. I really do think that it's a jaw-dropping monument to the might of the individual, a symphonic ode to mankind's potential. Its seven-hundred pages see Rand laying waste to conventional standards, inverting all of society's most cherished values, and dropping more than a few subtle hints about the potential dangers of good intentions. Critics of Rand's work seem to miss out on the difference between quality and agreeability; they attack The Fountainhead for its philosophical underpinnings, calling it a piece of trash for no other reason than that they don't see things in quite the same way as Ayn Rand. They don't seem to care about its literary merit. Either that, or they just can't see the novel for what it is. They're completely oblivious to its ecstatic drama, angular poetry, remorseless tension, and epic scope. When they call Rand humorless, I have a hard time believing that they're missing out on the smirking satire and bruising irony that lurk beneath The Fountainhead's surface. When they call Rand inhuman, I wonder what they make of the dizzying panoply of characters that populate her work. Are they aware of the care she takes in evoking sympathy, even for her antagonists? Are they aware that she goes out of her way to remind us that Peter Keating, Alvah Scarret, and the Dean really are human beings? Even when she's depicting pure evil, Ayn Rand understands the importance of complexity, vision, and dimension; indeed, the novel's arch villain is every bit as masterful a creation as Shakespeare's Iago. Critics don't seem to appreciate the protagonist, either. I mean, do they really need to be told that Howard Roark is the very opposite of a soulless automaton, that he's the personification of struggle, of ambition, of hope, of everything that is pure and honest and noble about humanity? No, I don't sympathize with Rand's atheism (or with Roark's). I don't think that selfishness is as clear-cut a virtue as it's made out to be in her work. I am, for the most part (and I say this somewhat grudgingly), a liberal. I'm certainly not an objectivist, and I only have libertarian sympathies if you squint hard enough and ignore my views on our healthcare system. But that's beside the point; I'm not a Christian and I still like the Bible. I'm not an objectivist, and I absolutely adore The Fountainhead. | Very bad DIscs | Customer Rating: | The fountaun head is a great piece of Ayn Rand's work. However I had trouble with 2 of the 6 discs I listened too. Returned the full set to Amazon. Amazon got me a replacement set in nothing flat. Excellent service there. The replacement New set has 4 bad out of the 12 I have listened too. Its going back as well. The manufaturer of these Audio books needs some new equipment of Quality control. | Attractive Book | Customer Rating: | | At first sight, i never thought I would like this book or read it like i'm in that world; but, i did. I was in and did not want to come out, for reasons i, myself, can't explain. it's a great book of mysterious power to suck the readers into the vacuum of its world. | Excellent Book! | Customer Rating: | | This is an excellent story that will keep you entertained the whole way through! The reader does a great job of doing different voices for characters which is also amusing to listen to. It will not disappoint! | no atlas shrugged | Customer Rating: | | this book is not on the same level of entertainment as atlas shrugged, but i did still very much enjoy it. i find myself aggreeing with what ayn rand writes and find her philosophy very interesting and compelling |
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