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To call Ayn Rand, the high priestess of the human will, a mere force of nature would to her have been an insult as well as a cliche. But how else to describe this extraordinary, maddening, and indestructible individual? Born a century ago this year into the flourishing bourgeoisie of glittering, doomed St. Petersburg, Alisa Zinovyevna Rosenbaum was to triumph over revolution, civil war, Lenin’s dictatorship, an impoverished immigrant existence, and bad reviews in the New York Times to become a strangely important figure in the history of American ideas. Even the smaller details of Rand’s life come with the [...]

A Strangely Important Figure

January 26, 2005

Ayn Rand by Jeff Britting; published originally in The New York Sun

Gott im Himmel, what was Harry thinking? If you are a public figure, the great grandson of the last emperor of India no less, and you live in censorious—and camera-phone-saturated—times, attending a “Native and Colonial” party is almost certainly unwise. To do so in Nazi uniform is absolute madness. And after days of high drama, low farce, and massed denunciations, we all know the result. The “Clown Prince” and the Circus To take just a brief selection of the criticism, Harry is now the “Hitler Youth” (the Sun, a newspaper that dilutes its moments of moral indignation with bouts of [...]

Waving The Bloody Shirt

January 18, 2005

National Review Online