Book description
Published in 1957, Atlas Shrugged was Ayn Rand's greatest achievement and last work of fiction. In this novel she dramatizes her unique philosophy through an intellectual mystery story that integrates ethics, metaphysics, epistemology, politics, economics, and sex. Set in a near-future U.S.A. whose economy is collapsing as a result of…
Why read it?
11 authors picked Atlas Shrugged as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
I’ll be honest: I don’t like Ayn Rand. I think she is a bad writer and a worse philosopher.
But I also can’t think of a book that better illustrates how, in the last century, we became a society that embraces greed and reveres the pursuit of wealth than Atlas Shrugged. Rand romanticizes a world where people are selfish, where empathy is weakness, where money is literally a religion, and the only thing worth pursuing.
It’s a maddening novel, but it lays the groundwork for the reality that would become Den of Thieves. I did not read every…
From Paul's list on showing how greed became good.
Some say this book is political, but I didn’t get this at all. It’s about a very strong woman and the birth of a new way, a new order, born from the failure or inadequacies of the norm. The characters all go through a transformation that is creative, innovative, and definitely leading edge. We get glimpses of this new order but don’t really know what these glimpses are at the time.
My eyes were riveted to each page, and I really wanted to be there and experience what the characters were going through. The story itself is amazing, and I…
From Perley-Ann's list on embracing change by exploring alt lifestyles.
Few novels epitomize excellence in as many areas as Ayn Rand’s book. I don't know if it was because it never came up during the years of my formal education, but I put off reading it for years after I became vaguely aware of it. And then I read it twice.
One might think of it in terms of being part one of Orwell’s 1984. The two books are nowhere near similar, but whereas 1984 is a dystopian future without regard for how society would get to such a point, Atlas Shrugged is the embryonic steps that could lead…
From DL's list on movie-ready thrills and good plots.
If you love Atlas Shrugged...
I first read Ayn Rand’s seminal work Atlas Shrugged when I was a teenager, and it opened my eyes to the dangers of totalitarianism. I re-read it this year because the events I remember so vividly from the book are terrifyingly prescient of what is happening today.
The heroine, Dagny Taggart, runs a railroad, and society is crumbling under the weight of simultaneous government oppression of productive citizens and the laissez-faire attitude toward crime and corruption. She battles the huge, restrictive bureaucracy while around her, brilliant scientists, engineers, etc., are disappearing.
She hears rumors of a secret place where the…
This book was a forerunner and inspiration to the big society science fiction of the John Brunner era, and (like much of her writing) should properly be understood as an alternative reality science fiction, imitated by many writers including Brunner and Robert Silverberg.
Rand became a controversial figure because of the cult that grew up around her, promoting elitist ideas, and driven mainly by her husband. Yet Rand herself was a brilliant writer and thinker who wanted to be a philosopher. The writing is not only deeply intellectual, it was deeply character driven.
As a non-native English speaker, her writing…
From Mark's list on a vision of a near future society in trouble.
It isn’t often that a book written a long time ago would be one of my recommendations. Atlas Shrugged is a compelling story of what our world could become if political forces collide along the way. In Rand's piece she pits Capitalism against Socialism through the eyes of Railroad executive Dagny Taggart and Steel Magnet, Hank Rearden. It is an extraordinary piece of literature that will leave you questioning if it was written as a warning of where our current-day societies are headed. A long read, but well worth your time.
From Bruce's list on characters fighting against perceived wrongs.
If you love Ayn Rand...
If you can answer the question “Who is John Galt?” a recommendation for Ayn Rand’s epic novel Atlas Shrugged isn’t necessary. Putting aside the Libertarian and Objectivist political movements her novel inspired, at its core the true hero of Atlas Shrugged is not Galt, but the female lead Dagny Taggart. Written in 1957, long before the women’s movement of the 60s, Taggart is and remains the most inspirational woman character of all generations then and now.
From Raven's list on strong women who succeed in a male-dominated world.
Dagny Taggart is an epic protagonist who must use her mind to transcend the intellectual fog blanketing her world that is disintegrating from misguided values. Hauntingly contemporary considering the novel’s publication in 1957, she is surrounded by people who hold philosophies that encourage collectivism and irrationality. She has to trust her own insights to transcend the truisms of her day. Instead of propping up those who don’t deserve her heroic efforts, she lets go of what people tell her she should be doing to instead create an individual life worthy of her respect. The intellectual sweep of this novel is…
From Cinda's list on tenacious women who won't be denied their adventures.
Nearly every economic problem would be fixed if we adhered to the concepts in Rand’s book. Written as fiction, the work tackles the downsides of ever-increasing governmental overreach, and how standing with your rigid principles is more important than ever with all the looters and moochers around nowadays.
The work goes on to explain that money is not the root of all evil, it is the root of all production. According to The US Library of Congress, Atlas Shrugged is the second-most influential book of all time (after The Bible).
From Peter's list on to get more from capitalism.
If you love Atlas Shrugged...
This book is a large, difficult, preachy novel. Its characters are not very complex—most are either very good (and handsome) or very evil (and ugly). It moves slowly, with long, repetitive speeches intertwined with the story that slow it down further.
Yet I recommend it because the concepts are so important, and the story and characters have come to symbolize the beautiful progress of capitalism and the ugly regression of crony capitalism. This is not an easy or necessarily enjoyable read, but it is an important one.
From Bob's list on dystopian books that are great lessons for today.
If you love Atlas Shrugged...
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