Posted on 01/14/2026 6:31:38 AM PST by dynachrome
This is not my usual fare. I typically summarize books that expose institutional capture, medical corruption, or the mechanisms by which official narratives diverge from observable reality. Atlas Shrugged is not that kind of book. It is a novel—a thousand-page philosophical novel published in 1957 about railroads and steel mills and a mysterious man who stops the motor of the world. It came up recently in conversation with a close friend, and I realized that despite its enormous cultural footprint, almost no one I know has actually read it. They know the name Ayn Rand. They have opinions about her. But they have not sat with the book itself.
(Excerpt) Read more at unbekoming.substack.com ...
Well put
I read the entire book about 10 years ago and often see similairties to the Dems’ actions of today. It is depressing to think of our country in that grey, sad state as it was in the book.
My one beef with it was at the end when there was an apocalyptic end to the socialist system. She totally glosses over it. Dagny escapes to Utopia but there’s no detail on how the system imploded. I thought that was a weakness in an otherwise incredible book.
I read it 60 years ago when I was 16 and, likewise, was greatly influenced. At that time I also read The Law by Bastiat which, at less than 100 pages, makes many of the same points but without the narrative that Rand uses to flesh things out.
Directive 10-289: Coming soon in California.
The Dagney from the first movie was the hottest.
Just saying.
Watch NYC and California
Atlas ping.
The second book got me working on the Goldwater campaign while still in high school, and here I am at FR for 28 years.
NO SUCH THING AS “TOO EARLY FOR POPCORN”.
BOOK WAS WRITTEN IN 1947.
TOOK HER 10 YEARS TO GET IT PUBLISHED
The book needed three editors!
My mother was born less than two months before the Wall Street crash of 1929. When I told my mother that I was reading "Atlas Shrugged" she said Ayn Rand was too preachy. I never discussed the book with her.
It's a problem now that technology prevents hiding a Galt's Gulch in this day and age.
I marked the three Atlas Shrugged films on ROKU a few years ago but haven't watched them because their rewriting the story into our time makes them fall flat.
I have been an individualist from day one. "I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine." Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged
Reminds me of Tolkein.
I tried to read it all. Honest….
Then I just skipped ahead, figuring if I missed something I could go back and re-read it. I hadn’t missed anything.
Up until that point the story was fine. Then it just mired down for a while.
They rewrote the story into our time but did it in such a way that it wasn’t very relatable to the audience. Keeping it railroad focused made it lose impact. Yes they had a back story to explain the railroad emphasize but I found it to be ludicrous.
They should have dropped the railroad connection completely and made Taggart Transcontinental into Taggart Transportation. Made it a shipping company - trucking, air transport, shipping and yes even rail. They rest of the story could have remained the same. I have friends who thought it should have been Taggart Telecommunications. Yes, very relatable for the modern audience. My problem with that is I think it would have required a major rewrite of the story. If read that Ayn Rand’s estate wouldn’t allow any changes to the book. They cite the changes Hollyweird did to Fountainhead, Rand was so disgusted by it she disowned any relationship to the movie. That’s why it took so long for it to reach movie form. They finally allowed the “railroad back story” which as I said I think it damaged the story telling.
I could never get too deep into the trilogy. Although, I liked the Hobbit. I havent even watched the movies.
“there is actually a three part movie adaption of Atlas Shrugged.”
Yes. I have the DVDs. The first part was excellent and had the best Dagney Taggart and Hank Rearden. The second one ... meh. The last one ... ugh.
“...about railroads and steel mills...”
I’m not sure the writer of the article even read it. I read it after finding out about the group RUSH, with much of the early lyrics influenced by Ayn Rand. It has been many years now, but I don’t recall it being a slog to get through. But back then I loved to read.
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