Reviews

Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand

jcoryv's review against another edition

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2.0

Just can't get into this... started over a couple of different times. Maybe I'll try again someday. Maybe not.

lauren_h's review against another edition

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4.0

I wish I could give parts of this book 5 stars and the other parts 4 stars. As much as I liked this book (well, more like was terrified of this book because of it's implications) there were parts of it that dragged on. I felt sometimes the characters gave speeches for the sake of giving speeches. They could have been condensed. The first 5 pages of a speech was excellent with great points, things I wanted to remember to use in conversations later but then the characters would start to repeat themselves, and that is where I felt the book would lose a lot of people. So 4 stars for those areas. Otherwise, the story is fantastic and absolutely terrifying in the way it seems to be coming true in real life. I've read other readers reviews of this book and while I do agree that the characters have an air of perfectionism that cannot possibly be attained or should be attained in real life... the overall message of the book is solid. And to those who don't agree or appreciate the message all I have to say is this... what if she's right? We're all in a heap of trouble if she is.

archiegitdog's review against another edition

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4.0

I think this was 65 hours long on audible. It was a book I loved and some parts hated at same time. Some of the speeches just went on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on..............and on BUT the description of what was going on around all the characters was excellent. I also had no idea book was written in 1957. I am glad i made my way through it and loads of concepts I liked but dont think i could do it again!

barefootscotobx's review against another edition

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5.0

Ayn Rand moved me in such a way that I think of her books as I navigate my every day life. Between this and The Fountainhead, I have been reading and re-reading them for the past 20 years. Each time I find something new. Each time, more relevant to the world today than the first.

These books require curious dedication. I've heard complaints of a "slow start" but I disagree. It's a detailed start. It matters. Take your time and dive deep. I promise, you won't be disappointed.

spenkevich's review against another edition

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1.0

Honestly this book isn’t even worth talking about. It’s a genre of its own called Dumb Dystopia. Here’s my old review I guess:

Recently someone told me this was their favorite novel. I believe they referred to it as 'the greatest book ever written.' I find a lot wrong with that statement. Because who cares about Ulysses, right? No, that won't do, I'm going to have to drink and rant for a moment. I refrained from commenting to the customer, because I'm sure it is typically for political reasons that people like this book and, whatever, some people swing left, some people swing right, some people suckle the golden calf of capitalism and some love thy socialist ways and who am I to judge. I'm not a politician and you should all thank me for that. I'd like to push politics aside but, frankly, I think it is solely for political reasons and edgelord posturing that this book managed to stay relevant and in print. However, I suppose you are all here to hear about the politics of this book and I would be boring you with talks of wooden character and language and overall juvenile writing abilities, so I'll save those for after. I don't want to argue politics, especially not while drinking, so lets take a moment to look at the plot (and oh what a plot it is) and see how the politics hold up within. Besides, there isn't much to analyze in this one as the writing barely goes beneath the surface. It’s basically people got sad they couldn’t profit in the specific way they decided they should so they turned the world into a dumb dystopia because their vocation only mattered to them if they could lord it over people. The people the novel praises are those who simply sit back and let the workers make money for them and then call themselves the doers. It’s weird and kind of gross.

Once upon a time there were some factory owners. These factory owners loved to preach about the pride in working for their company, and hey, maybe conditions are piss-poor and maybe you are barely scraping by to feed your growing family, but at least you can take pride in working for a great company and that should satisfy you and give you meaning (some cool existentialist thought could have been added into the book for that, but Rand misunderstood Kant so I doubt she'd be able to add anything beyond surface detail and pop-philosophy). Then one day the great evil government (the government is such a caricature and it's almost a surprise she didn't have them all wearing black hooded cloaks. And really, who voted for those guys?) passed some outlandish laws that people couldn't have a monopoly and maybe we should pay our workers. Suddenly, having pride in what they did seemed terrible. Instead of taking pride in their company and working hard to sustain the nation they so loved, like they preached to their employees, they bitched about it a bunch and then stopped working. Nice guys, right? They set up a utopia (Ayn Rand of all people should know utopia is a word for 'fake') society where competing is so cool and they say stuff like 'man, I hope someone competes with me and nearly puts me out of business', which isn't all that different from what was going on in the society they fucked off into the woods from in the most comically shameful manner possible. Meanwhile Rand says cheating on your wife is way cool and general chaos ensues.

So it goes for awhile, but then, THEN, after a overlong speech that takes all the points any reader with half a mind already put together for themselves and regurgitates it out without the metaphors and into a boring speech that repeats itself many times about the points already mentioned in the novel and then makes sure you know the stuff already mentioned in the novel through a long speech, all hell breaks loose and the main characters bust into town like the goddamn A-Team. Guns blaze, Dagny murders a few dudes and the one character who was actually worth reading about blows up the super-weapon (because that guy was awesome. Screw the rest of the characters, I want to read more about that guy. He was 'about it', like people who are apparently 'about it' say while slugging their Mountain Dews and playing video games.) All integrity of the novel was lost with the hysterically overblown rescue scene. I mean, they even got out on 'choppers' at the end. It was the worst action movie I've ever seen, and I'm not even going to go into the scene where apparently it is okay to shoot your employees in the head for going on strike. And that, my friends, is Atlas Shrugged. People seem to really like the politics, which are “if things aren't going your way just fuck off into the woods shouting ‘and fuck america too.'” Also she’s really into talking about shooting soldiers in the face.

Finally. What I really want to talk about is the book as a piece of literature, so don't get all steamed up about politics on me here, pal! Granted, there are a few pretty lines here, particularly the line about cigarettes and how all great thinkers should have that glowing ember at their fingertips while the lightbulb of thought is burning, but other than that Rand is a forgettable sci-fi novelist that has poorly aged with time. Not a line of dialogue rings true to actual speech, not a cough or a scoff can go without her graciously informing the reader that the scoff or cough shows their disapproval or discomfort and whatnot. Furthermore, she certainly can't let a metaphor slip out without explaining it; reading Ayn Rand feels like being a grown adult and sitting in a elementary reading class and having the teacher explain how books work. It's as if she has no faith in her reader as a literate, thinking human being. Worse, the characters are the sort that can only exist on the page and have such narrow-minded two-dimensional aspects that one can't possibly imagine them walking around in the real world. Of course the government is terrible in this novel, its such a caricature that nobody in their right mind would bother being submissive to it. Granted, this book is satire, but come on Rand, put some effort into your creativity.

' James, you ought to discover some day that words have an exact meaning.' This idea pops up constantly in Atlas Shrugged, that words have a specific and definite meaning, and the character always wields this like a weapon straight to the heart (James does suck as a person and character so I don't feel bad for him for his inability to easily retort. However, Rand seems fully unable to build three-dimensional characters so is it that James is garbage or Rand’s novel itself?). This idea is possibly my least favorite aspect of the book because it is comically incorrect. Though maybe my English degree is as useless as it is as finding me a job (totally useless), but from what I've gathered reading books (and Derrida) is that language is anything but exact. Language is pliable, words are an attempt at harnessing the abstract into sound, caging thought into something more tangible. If words have an exact meaning then all the poets have been doing is creating gibberish. And how can Rand go on writing her weak metaphors if she actually believes that statement.

Briefly, Ayn Rand separates people into two catagories: those that make, and the 'looters'. Interestingly “those who make” spend the whole book only making things hard for the working class who actually make the things they make money off of.

Somehow, people still rave about this book. I will say, however, that the chapter where they kill everyone by putting a steam engine through a tunnel was incredibly well done. She could have cut the rest of the novel and simply published that chapter because all the major points are present and for a brief moment the book felt worth reading. I also loved the bits about the pirate and the scene where the government takes over the mines to find them desolated. There are some great 'fight the man' moments but they are buried under a god-awful plot that puts the plot and politics before the writing and told through characters that are so two-dimensional that I can't even believe the scenes that have them walking down a street. There's some politics here I guess some people could get down with if your goal is to be a freshman year edgelord in a poly sci class, and I do understand that this is a response to the horrors of Communist Russia, but she did this so much better in Anthem (though even in that she contradicts herself often. Right after a large discussion on freedom and not letting others think for you, the man names the woman character. He just tells her, this is now your name. Which seems suspiciously not like the freedom the man was fighting for) and others have tackled the issue in a much more agreeable and artistic manner. All sarcasm and jokes aside, I simply do not think this book is well written. I could honestly not care less about the political aspects, its the literary aspects that cause the low rating. I came, I read, I shrugged.
1/5

Disclaimer: I read this while working in a factory that had no heat or AC and paid minimum wage as the salary cap. However, the office had AC, heat and tons of paid vacation. Perhaps I'm just bitter about the time I was sent home for listening to a DFW interview on Bookworm because it was 'spreading liberal propaganda in the workplace.'
Disclaimer #2: 1 star is probably too harsh, but I really wanted to try writing an angry rant review for once. Sorry, I'm most likely the asshole in this situation.

There are two novels that can change a bookish fourteen-year old's life: The Lord of the Rings and Atlas Shrugged. One is a childish fantasy that often engenders a lifelong obsession with its unbelievable heroes, leading to an emotionally stunted, socially crippled adulthood, unable to deal with the real world. The other, of course, involves orcs. - John Rogers

oragrace's review against another edition

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slow-paced
  • Loveable characters? No

0.75

rajs's review against another edition

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3.0

This novel expands upon the idea that was merely introduced in The Fountainhead. Often hard to read, a significant portion of this book is Rand lecturing her readers. The tenets expressed are unapologetic, as the institutions of family and charity are attacked outright.

foundation's review against another edition

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2.0

I first read this book as a teenager (maybe 16-17) and it was mind-opening. It opened up a new perspective of the world and I really admired Ayn Rand. Now 15 years later that whole world view seems pretty myopic and Ayn Rand seems almost like a petulant child. The characters are just one-dimensional and refuse to evolve or learn anything. They seem mentally stuck in teenage. The whole message is just black and white with no subtlety at all. Again, it seems like how a teenager would view the world. In some ways maybe teenagers have a better view of the world but I seriously cannot imagine being in the selfish and sociopath mindset that Ayn Rand's characters live in.

constance222's review against another edition

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slow-paced
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No

0.25

acsaper's review against another edition

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5.0

Wow. . .what a truly epic tale!

Before my father brought me an old ratty copy of Atlas Shrugged while in Korea I had never heard of Ayn Rand. . .or at least, if I did, never paid any attention. As far as I know this is the longest book I've ever tackled but it was certainly worth every word.

Following the downfall of a newly industrialized America, Atlas Shrugged offers immeasurable insight to not on the casual reader but to the aspiring businessman. Rand's personal philosophy of 'objectivism,' expressed via the ideals of the book's protagonists, should ring true to anyone who believes in the value of honest, hard work and the benefits reaped from such.

Though I will likely never re-read this monster of a tale I will certainly keep in mind the lives and times of Dagny, Hank, John and Fransisco. Their desire for greatest, and unwillingness to succumb to anything less should stand as an inspiration for anyone who believes that they are capable of achieving that which no one else could.

An excellent book, enjoy!