Politics

And Then There's Ayn (Review of New Rand Bio in New York Mag)

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From a review of Anne Heller's Ayn Rand and the World She Made in New York:

Rand tends to inspire either religious-grade conversion or wild denunciation, and over the last 40 years a good-size library of violently partisan books has emerged: inside accounts from worshippers, detractors, worshippers turned detractors, detractors turned worshippers. A truly neutral biography seems impossible. Anyone deep enough to be an authority is probably either a true believer or a heretic. But Heller manages to find a nice middle ground; she seems equally happy exposing admirable and ugly secrets. She discovered Rand's work late, in her forties—well beyond the usual indoctrination age—and, although she calls herself "a strong admirer," she was denied access to the official Rand archives for being insufficiently pious….

Heller does a remarkable job with a subject who was almost cripplingly complex—a real woman starring in her own propaganda film about a propagandist whose propaganda eventually takes over the world. Toward the end of her life, Rand listened as a prominent psychologist stood onstage and dismissed her fictional heroes—those idealized steel barons and physicists and composers—as implausible. Soon she'd had enough and stood up in the crowd, outraged.

 "Am I unreal?" she shouted. "Am I a character who can't possibly exist?"

She intended this, one suspects, as a refutation. It strikes me as maybe the most profound question she ever raised.

Read the whole review here.

Go here to read Brian Doherty's Wash Times review of Jennifer Burns' Goddess of The Market: Ayn Rand and the American Right, read my Wilson Quarterly review of Heller's and Burns' new books, and watch the trailer for the upcoming eight-part Reason.tv series, "Radicals for Capitalism: Celebrating the Enduring Legacy of Ayn Rand."

Hat tip: Alan Vanneman