Atlas Shrugged: Halfway There
Posted in books, college, life on 02/03/2009 04:30 pm by Wes
Things haven’t quite gone as planned. But that’s par for the course in the big golf game of life, and reading the life works of Cormac McCarthy at the pace of a book a week has left me little time to devote to Ayn Rand and her endless philosophizing. But I’m halfway there, having reached page 552 a couple nights ago. Over the hump, around the bend, et cetera. And so far…well, it’s no Fountainhead.
Where The Fountainhead felt dense and unique thanks to Ayn Rand’s very mechanical writing style, Atlas Shrugged passes into the realm of tedium. It’s often simply too repetitive, too long-winded to be as great as its predecessor. The characters, too, feel like slightly less interesting versions of the main cast of The Fountainhead — only Howard Roark is a better protagonist than Hank Rearden and Dominique Francon is a more interesting lean, steely leading lady than Dagny Taggart. Maybe it’s just the order I’ve read the books in. But so far, Rand hasn’t deviated from The Fountainhead enough to grab my attention the way she did the first time.
The politicians and typical members of society are still as overbearingly disgusting and small-minded. And while I haven’t expected certain plot points that have developed throughout the book, the general course of the narrative seems very predictable, which makes the hundreds of pages of blatant delaying action all the more frustrating.
We’ll see if it blows me away in the second half.

