How I found Atlas Shrugged in 1962

Posted by WDonway 11 years, 8 months ago to Philosophy
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I guess that members of Galt's Gulch sometimes tell the story of how they discovered Objectivism. My story does not seem to me very exciting. That is strange, though, because the discovery of Atlas Shrugged, when I was 17 years old, in the summer between the end of high school and going off to start at Brown University, was the most exciting and influential thing that happened in my entire life.

Ayn Rand published Atlas Shrugged in 1957, and, unlike publication of The Fountainhead, this was a major publishing event. Just read how Bennett Cerf, founder of Random House, persuaded Ayn Rand to give the book to Random House. At any rate, it was a publishing event, and Ayn Rand began to get invitations to speak in very prestigious places. There are some essays by Ayn Rand, once only available as pamphlets from the old NBI Book Service, that came out of these important speaking engagements.

Well, then, one of these was at Brown University, actually perhaps the women's co-ordinate college (then), Pembroke.

All four Donway kids grew up on a farm in Holden, Massachusetts, rather rural then. But the local New England grammar schools were good, as was the regional high school, and three out of four Donway children were brilliant students (I was the exception). SO...my sister, Lucile, one year my senior, had gone off to Pembroke/Brown for her freshman year. One evening, walking home from the library, she ran into a shouting, seething mob of girls around some speaker walking from the lecture hall to the student coffee shop. My sister stopped at the edge of this mob and asked: Who is it? "Oh, Ayn Rand," someone told her, "she wrote a new book." Now...why, in the name of all that is rational and normal, did my sister, Lucile, just hearing that one comment, go the next day to the bookstore and buy a copy of Atlas Shrugged? I see here the hand of Providence, because, seriously, who would do that? AND, Lucile then reads all 1300 pages, becomes excited, and comes home. First to be infected is my younger brother, Roger, who reads it and has the conversion experience. So Lucile and Roger are talking about atheism and selfishness and capitalism, and I, good New England boy, am furious at these unspeakable ideas--sudden virulent infection of the family.

No attempt to argue helps. I take "the" copy of Atlas Shrugged up to my room, under the eaves, and read it in a non-stop Marathon of two days, speaking to no one, arming myself to refute this crap.

Finishing Atlas, I walk down the stairs, in a trance, and shout to my brother and sister, "Who Is John Galt?"

Now, a question: what was there about this New England family of second-generation Polish immigrants, brought up in the Congregational Church, decently although not deeply devout, of parents who admired FDR--what was there about this family that permitted three children to read Atlas Shrugged and have an immediate, lifelong, irreversible conversion experience?

I invite your comments.
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  • Posted by 11 years, 8 months ago
    No reason I cannot show you the poem to which I refer, from my new book, "How Glad I Am for Man, Tonight." I want to make something as clear as I can. This poem does not capture my actual, boyhood perception of Tarzan and the stories. At that time, I was focused on the actual events and characters and episodes of the book--and with great fidelity to detail, since I knew these books by heart. They were total real to me, as though reading history.

    No, this poem is my attempt, as an adult, to capture the emotional meaning that Tarzan as a hero had in my life and the sense of courage and excitement about life that the character of Tarzan gave to me. Especially, the sheer nobility. To do so, I must capture the rapture, the sense of any and all obstacles removed, the sense of unlimited moral courage. Therefore, the poem is almost dreamlike because I wanted the sense of being carried to an utterly new world: Galt's Gulch in Africa. As a boy involved with books, I would not have recognized any of this in the poem. So here it is:

    Tarzan of the Apes

    (For Dad, who showed me,
    all can be forgiven)

    I knew that you would come for me,
    Come dropping, forest demigod,
    From loftiest, implausible
    Green jungle high-roads that you trod.

    Liege lord of titan trees that sweep
    Mere heaven, noble imago
    Of man as sure as marble slimmed
    To life by Michelangelo,

    You would appear upon my path,
    As sun will touch a single tree;
    And with your eyes as wild and kind
    As freedom, you would look on me,

    And nod, impartial as a beast,
    Or God, and I would go, and soon
    We’d fly as high as dream desire
    Through trees beneath a jungle moon.

    And we would never tire, fight
    And never doubt. Our fathers’ knives,
    Baptized in fierce Bolgani’s blood,
    Would bless the battles of our lives.

    We’d summon good Tantor and tease
    Malicious Sheetah’s snarling smile.
    We’d stride as nude and beautiful
    As beasts to baffle Satan's guile--

    At manhood’s noon, our two great hearts
    Would stay the lion’s breath above
    The golden woman’s blameless breast,
    And slay the lord of Death—for love.

    And never taste the fatal fruit
    Of fear, and never die, or die
    Each day and never care who ate
    Our bones or where our bones would lie.
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  • Posted by 11 years, 8 months ago
    I am so appreciative of the comments and the interesting stories. Most of you, of course, focus on the truth in Atlas Shrugged, how its ideas and principles make explicit much in the American tradition and sense of life. This, of course, is a great appeal.

    With all due respect, as they say, I doubt that the Donway family conversion experience had much to do with that. You have to grasp, recall from your own experience, perhaps, that my reaction was not to recognizing familiar implicit truths, not even to discovered stimulating new ideas; this was INSTANT FULL EMOTIONAL CONVERSION. This was not a conversion of the mind, which after all isn't likely in two days given the huge substance of Atlas Shrugged. This was a whole body conversation: a glow of utter exaltation, burning conviction, and absolute certainty. Even Ayn Rand's ideas, newly presented in a few days, are unlikely to produce this in three restless, skeptical, sometimes cynical adolescents.

    No, let's look at what Ayn Rand really did by writing a novel that made (ready for this) business executives into romantic rebels and heroes against the establishment. She wrote a novel about the most attractive adult heroes ever portrayed in fiction: beautiful or handsome, courageous, all commanding, and as much a moral loadstar as is Jesus for Christianity. And millions of people over the centuries have worked, suffered, and died with the vision an purpose of Jesus before their eyes.

    My reaction, quite simply, was that I wanted to be John Galt, or Francisco D'Anconia or Hank Rearden; I wanted to be better than the whole of mooching, frightening, confused mankind. I wanted to take Dagny to bed. I wanted a secret and wonderful place in the mountains where I could escape all my doubts, burdens, worries, boredom, and fears.

    You see, my Dad and Mom did one wonderful thing (among others, for me). They bought and read me books about heroes. The only books that my Dad actually bought, brought home, and read to me were the Tarzan books. (Forget those dreadful movies, Burroughs was a dazzling Romantic genius who wrote from a strictly moralistic and heroic viewpoint.) Tarzan of the Apes was the light, inspiration, salvation, and motivation of a very troubled, conflicted, angry, often frightened boy. No matter what happened, I thought of Tarzan and I could deal with it--always. I could run faster, fight harder, and face my fears.

    In my first book of poems, "Touched by Its Rays," I have a poem about discovering Objectivism back there on the farm; in the second book, I wrote the poem I always meant to write about Tarzan and me and finally did. One of my life achievements.

    And as I grew up, I imitated Tarzan. I went into the woods and pretended with my brother Roger. We had toy figures and endlessly played hero stories of Tarzan and others. And I thought a great deal about whether I really could go to Africa and make this dream come true.

    And then, I real Atlas Shrugged and realized I didn't have to move to Africa, strip to a loin cloth, and fight lions. And my unquenchable passion shifted from Tarzan to John Galt and Francisco and to become those heroes, it was obvious, I had to know the ideas--all of them, perfectly, irrefutably, and then take them to the world.

    The phenomenon of Atlas Shrugged and generation after generation that that suddenly sees a moral vision from which NOTHING can dissuade them, who believe in the vision even before they can explain and defend it--that is the power of Romantic literature, and, by the way, can be seen in many cases in the Romantic era.

    And all around me, as I got into Objectivist circles in New York city, that conversion experience could be seen, often with all the intensity of cult--and many of the same problems. But that is another story.

    My story is discovery of how I could become one of the heroes I loved as a boy, heroes that even then I realized weren't practical models. I didn't have to resign myself that that life of adventure, great battles, heroism, perfect love, and triumph over evil would have to remain forever in books.

    This is only the story of discovering Objectivism, not how all those dreams actually worked out. That is another story.
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    • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years, 8 months ago
      This is a lovely story, Walter, thank you for sharing it. This is my favorite line, "...a moral vision from which NOTHING can dissuade them, who believe in the vision even before they can explain and defend it..." Reading Atlas was like being spoken to personally. Someone was finally explaining to me why I felt the way I did about things when others didn't. It was a multifaceted journey for me, reading AS, that connection all the dots and pealed back all the layers of thought conditioning that was built up through political correctness etc. I wish I had stumbled onto it at a much younger age like you did. Things would have been a lot clearer a lot sooner, even though, looking back I managed to live it for the most part, but I could've done it with less turmoil. lol Thank you for coming to the gulch, Walter. I look forward to reading more of your work soon.
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  • Posted by Chortovka 11 years, 8 months ago
    Well, I grew up amongst the silver mines of northern Idaho. It was a brutal environment ... high rates of alcoholism, depression, spousal abuse ... long, hard, cold winters ... and other than the mines, which eventually killed, there were few job opportunities. I was fortunate to grow up in a fairly normal household and us kids had a lot of freedom *if* we followed the rules. The rules pretty much followed the Ayn Rand philosophy. So, for me, it was the only thing I ever knew. When I first read Atlas Shrugged as an adult (which I've read at least 10 times) in many ways, it was like reading the story of my life. "You want something, go earn it." "Do what you want, but the consequences belong to you." Yada, Yada. Today, I'm sure it would be considered abuse.
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    • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years, 8 months ago
      Well if it's child of abuse to tell kids those things these days I'm surprised I haven't gotten the ax from my job. (I work at a school). The day we can't point out how a child's bad decisions lead to his/her consequences, or tell them they have to earn their rewards, or explain how their lunch is NOT free, that somebody somewhere paid for it with their hard earned money so they could have a plate of nice food at lunch time...I'm outta there. :)
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    • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
      wow, Chort- you're the first in here to have said they read AS that many times. Many in this site describe something like you said. They were already living their lives based on AR's values, and were just fortified when they were introduced to the book-or the movies, for many in here they saw the movies first. For me, it was different. I was the typical college liberal. It was through discussions with my future husband about AS and the Fountainhead which changed my ideas about certain values. I always worked hard but it took me quite awhile to understand the concept of selfishness. heck, between church and parents teaching one to be selfless all the time-it's almost like you need one of those cult de-programmers!
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      • Posted by Chortovka 11 years, 8 months ago

        I love her style of writing. I watched Atlas Shrugged, Part I, at least 4 times. I got tired of waiting for Part II to show up, so I ordered it yesterday, which is how I stumbled onto this forum.

        If anyone endorses Communism, I'd highly recommend her book, "We the Living" which is a sobering portrayal of life in the old Soviet Union.
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  • Posted by $ kathywiso 11 years, 8 months ago
    You saw the truth in her writing. You knew that it was reason that was exposed to you and that you can accomplish what you decide to do in your life and it is only your choices that decide your success or failure...it is a foundation to succeed if you embrace it...
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  • Posted by Chortovka 11 years, 8 months ago
    PS: Forgot to answer your question. Your parents permitted their children (you) to read Atlas Shrugged because it is a story of survival, success, freedom, independence, critical thought, hard work, capitalism ... and the consequences of ignorance, laziness, and dependence. .
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  • Posted by khalling 11 years, 8 months ago
    I am grateful that you shared. many of us were brought up in meritocracy and "hard work." you and your siblings recognized the innately American foundations of individualism, a belief in reason, science, and technology, a rejection of aristocracy and tradition-ultimately, a right to live for yourself. Looking forward to anything you'll share about the growth of Objectivism in the 20th century and how you see the future of it
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