The Fountainhead (Centennial Edition Hc) by Ayn Rand

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(Hardcover - Centennial Edition)

  • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
  • Pub. Date: May 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9780452286757
  • Sales Rank: 9,519
  • 752pp
  • Edition Description: Centennial Edition
  • Edition Number: 100
 
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Synopsis


Ayn Rand's classic novel has been inspiring readers for over half a century. Rand's hero is Howard Roark, a brilliant young architect whose revolutionary building designs lead him to wage a desperate battle against his colleagues, society, and even the woman he loves. Roark refuses to compromise. In defense of his selfish choices, Roark stuns his critics by developing a radical moral philosophy every bit as revolutionary as his buildings.

Annotation

A phenomenal bestseller since its publication in 1943, The Fountainhead brought Ayn Rand's philosophy of Objectivism to a worldwide audience. As original today as it was when it was written, this novel reinvents the modern-day hero. This anniversary edition includes a special afterword by Leonard Peikoff and excerpts from Rand's own notes about the book.

New York Times - Purette

Ayn Rand is a writer of great power. She has a subtle and ingenious mind and the capacity of writing brilliantly, beautifully, bitterly.

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Biography

Ayn Rand is one of the rare writers who not only drew in readers with her novels, but created a philosophical movement with them. Her seminal Atlas Shrugged and The Fountainhead, cornerstones of her individualistic Objectivist world view, can be viewed as literature, self-empowerment texts, or both.

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Customer Reviews

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Fountainhead (Centennial Edition Hc)by Anonymous

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September 02, 2008: I see a compliment to the power of Ayn Rand's FOUNTAINHEAD, in this fact: Most of the customer reviews on this novel are impressive, including the ones I disagree with or which, from my perspective, misinterpreted some of the content of the book. What impressed me was that each of the reviews showed interesting contemplation communicated well, and intriguing ways of looking at the plot, characters, and thematic framework of this novel. This book is so pregnant with cranium stimulations it's easy to forget it's foremost a novel. Prozac and the sideline collection of wannabe Seratonin Uptake Inhibitors would be put out of business if people read a chapter or so of this type of material daily. Of course, the Prozac-type high wouldn?t come as easily as the the simple swallow of a pill. It takes time to work into the type of steady self-worth which gives a true high on the potential of life. I've read both FOUNTAINHEAD and ATLAS SHRUGGED three times each, and will probably reread them periodically over the remaining course of my life. I've written my review of ATLAS now I'd like to focus on what I valued most in reading FOUNTAINHEAD. I loved the character, Howard Roark. I identified with that character more than any other I've met in a work of fiction, more than any nonfiction person I?ve known about who has lived and been memorialized. I admired and was renewed by his repeated choices to be true to himself, his talent, his creativity, and his needs and desires on his life path. I enjoyed the way Rand wrote Roark's attraction to Dominique, and could understand the source of that attraction, even when she was pretending to be a spoiled, superficial, self-destructive fool. I knew he saw under the facade, and was uplifted to watch him gradually draw the beauty and honor out of her. What about the rape scene? That scene played in reality by humans at this time would have been a true rape, and that is anathema to me as it was to Ayn Rand. Within the world of the novel, FOUNTAINHEAD, that scene was not rape. You may thank me for not including here the several pages it would take for me to begin to explain my reasons for making this discrimination. Anyone who would actually read this review has the capacity to reason 'whether he agrees or disagrees with me' why I?ve made this discrimination between the development of human character in current reality, and these two characters within the essence of this novel. I loved Gail Wynand and the way he so easily saw Roark, and grew to love him. I was fascinated with Ellsworth Toohey he was a perfect personification of the frightening power of Evil, a power which 'as Roark knew' is linked securely to the underlying impotence of Evil in the face of integrity. Loved and hated each of the characters as Rand intended me to feel. Loved the way Rand described objects she hates: 'The Cosmo-Slotnick Building rose ponderously over the street, like a huge, white bromide.' I loved the way Rand described objects she loves, as she began her lead in to the architectural conclusion at the end of FOUNTAINHEAD: 'On a spring day, eighteen months later, Dominique walked to the construction site of the Wynand building. 'She looked at the skyscrapers of the city. They rose from unexpected spots, out of the low roof lines. They had a kind of startling suddenness, as if they had sprung up the second before she saw them and she had caught the last thrust of the...