Speaking of which: Anne Rice vs. Ayn Rand. The one is an American who writes about vampires, the other a vampire who writes about Americans...
That's excellent!
That would still be an improvement on the Rand I've read which, as mentioned above, is in the throw-away paperback category, far below what even the basest Hollywood producer would invest mainstream movie money in.
Apparently both Arch Enemy and Rush have done Anthem-themed albums...
However it turns out there is actually already a Fountainhead film, and Atlas Shrugged is currently in the works. So I stand corrected...
I was turned on to Ayn Rand at the age of 13 by Rush's 2112. My "Ayn Rand phase" was fortunately short-lived, perhaps 9 to 12 months. After plowing through her fiction, I turned to her non-fiction (The Virtue of Selfishness, Philosophy: Who Needs It?); how it dawned upon me at the age of 14 that her, um, "philosophy" (again, I don't think it's fair to real philosophers to...) was sheer nonsense is beyond me, and it was only some years later that I discovered her readings of Kant and Nietzsche to be adolescent at best.
Interestingly, a few mainstream publications have cited Atlas Shrugged as the most influential American novel of the previous century. L. Ron Hubbard should be turning in his grave.
Edit: Just found this in the wikipedia entry on Rand:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayn_randWhen a 1991 survey by the Library of Congress and the Book-of-the-Month Club asked what the most influential book in the respondent's life was, Rand's Atlas Shrugged was the second most popular choice, after the Bible.[102] Readers polled in 1998 and 1999 by Modern Library placed four of her books on the 100 Best Novels list (Atlas Shrugged, The Fountainhead, Anthem, and We the Living were in first, second, seventh, and eighth place, respectively) and one on the 100 Best Nonfiction list (The Virtue of Selfishness, in first place), with books about Rand and her philosophy in third and sixth place.[103] However, the validity of such polls has been disputed.[104] Freestar Media/Zogby polls conducted in 2007 found that around 8 percent of American adults have read Atlas Shrugged.[105]
Frightening...
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