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We the Living

We the Living

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Interesting, but not Rand's best.
Review: Although the brevity of this work may make it appear attractive to someone looking for an introduction to Ayn Rand, I would save this book only for readers who can't get enough of Rand's fiction. I would recommend Atlas Shrugged or The Fountainhead or even Rand's nonfiction before this work; personally I think The Anti-Industrial Revolution would be the best introduction to her nonfiction.

The book was not without its merits, however. This book was interesting in that it seemed to me to be the least preachy of Rand's fiction. It also had characters who were far more complex than usual for Rand. This work contained capitalists to be hated and communists to be admired, forcing Rand into relying on ideals of characters instead of personalities to get her views across. Rand claimed this book to be as close to an autobiography as she ever would write.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Interesting plot-unlikable characters
Review: I found this to be an interesting read and a good plot, however, I didn't think any of the main characters were admirable at all. Not that likable main characters are essential to a book/plot, but I am surprised by the other reviewers who really admire Kira and others who find that Andrei is the only "real man" in the book; a man who never betrays his values. First, on the Andrei front, while he does display the most virtue regarding his loyalty and stoicism, let's not forget that his loyalty led him to gun down peasants and farmers whom the communists felt were "cheating" them out of their share of crops. While the reader only sees Taganov when he's being an upstanding, passionate man who has strength of character and loves Kira honestly, Andrei's monologues allow us a glimpse into what he does on the job with the GPU. He seems comfortable with the killing and torture that made the USSR such a fun place to live under the communists.

Regarding Kira, her determination to live as an individual is admirable, however, her devotion to the empty Leo seems out of character. It's as though she's really only attracted to him physically. That makes her interesting, but not someone to model your life after, as so many other readers seem to suggest.

I thought the description of life in Soviet Russia was particulary well done. It's hard to believe that people (communists) actually talked like that, but Rand grew up in this period and has indicated that this aspect is accurate.

This is an excellent story, but it's thoroughly depressing.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Depression at its Best
Review: This book was definitely an intriguing and pretty accurate description of post-revolution society in Russia. The characters were intriguing as well. For those of you who aren't Ayn Rand readers, this book is completely unlike her others. The one quarrel I have with the book is its depression factor. Perhaps I become too emotional while reading, but this book really sank in and had a high sadness factor. Yet, overall, it is a must-read!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Absolutely Amazing
Review: I am seventeen and I have never read a book like this one . I was profoundly affected and I believe anyone who reads this book will be , too . Kira is an unbelievable character . Her story is poignant and real . The book is real . There are no mushy fake scenes of perfect love or happy endings . Life isn't that way and niether is this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An astonishing novel from an astonishing heroic woman
Review: In this book, Ayn Rand provides the reader with the expereince at looking at how important each individual human life is, how it is detstroyed under communism (or any dictatorship), and how man needs freedom in order to live. She should know. She was born and lived in Russia under communism, until she moved permanently to America at the age of 21. Thank you Ayn Rand for having the courage to leave the hellhole you grew up in, which only got worse later, and for coming to America and writing novels like this one, to warn people of the evils of totalitarianism. You will NEVER be forgotten.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An early work of Ayn Rand . . .
Review: . . . it still shows the keen intellect behind her writing. The character development seen in Atlas Shrugged and Fountainhead is there as well. Yet the book doesn't quite move as well as her later novels. Nevertheless, ten times better than the typical novel. Ayn Rand makes a searing indictment of communism, a system she grew up with and knew only too well.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: all i gotta say is wow
Review: this book left me absolutly breathless. i have read all of her other novels and found this to be the most touching. Kira was unlike any other character i have ever gotten to know, she has a charming quality. i could not get enough of her. i cried for 45 minutes when i finished and later when i thought about it. i am 16 and i go to enloe high in raleigh nc. this book is incredible. raw and true to human nature. i enjoyed it most b/c it was not fancy with the happy endings and over done unrealistic love. read it. it is true to LIFE. and how people truly are. and appreciate what that means to you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: It was not author¿s imagination, it was her experience.
Review: For somebody who came from Russia this book is a vivid reminder of the horror, that people like Kira experienced after revolution. Is the book about love? Yes, of course. Is it about human spirit and ego? You bet. Does it show us that love may be blind? Unfortunately. But in addition to all that, it is a testimony against the kingdom of ignorance. They the living were turned into the mass of toilers. They still remember days when they were humans, and now one by one they surrender to the power of pigs. From the very first page you feel that it is not just fiction, but almost a documentary. May be that is why it is the best book by Rand. It was the story that she lived.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A definite view of the quirkiness of life.
Review: I first saw this book in bookstores when I was in junior college, not more than 16 years old. I looked at its last page (as was my habit) and decided I could not digest the book.

But the book persisted. It was there in bookstores even when I became 30 years old and I said there must be something to it. I have to read it. And so I read.

I read it after a tiring journey in which I had not slept for 36 hours and it was so interesting I forgot my tiredness and read it with the customary tears that I shed every time I read a touching Readers Digest story. It must be in my nature to cry.

The plot is clearly absorbing and not an ideal one . As close to reality as mundane life, with its crushed expectations gets to be. But I do not know why Kira is the heroine in the story. It should have been Andrei - the only man who is a man in the entire story. The only man who never betrays his values, the only man with a heart and decency. What does Kira see in Leo? Is Rand trying to portray that women can have no sense of seeing things for what they are? Is Rand saying that women need to doll up and let men love their bodies and not their souls?

True love may be rare, but it better be well deserved! Love may be a religion but it should have a sense of values which allow it to be given to the deserving person. The lover Kira and love itself become some slavish fetter which is loved as a drug addict may love his drug. If this is love and if imagination of love is greater than achieving it in reality as the last passages show then it is a monumental acceptance of the fact that humans are capable of fooling themselves. Kira may have been a good soldier but she did not see the direction she was headed in. That is not anytime the mark of a good soldier at all. Real love should be one which improves one's values and not one which destroys them. Kira did not know the preciousness of love - the immunity it gives to any true love - though Rand imagines and shows that Kira achieves just that! It is the only novel by her I read, so I cannot comment more on this.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is the book I live by.
Review: I read my first Ayn Rand book when I was 15 it was Anthem and it was for my english class. It stayed with me for 6 years until I read We The Living. This is the best book, and I live by it. If you like to think, if you aren't very religious and you are an individual then this book is for you. It is more than a love story, it is intellectual and thought provoking. Now 7 years from reading Anthem and 1 from reading We The Living, I am now reading Atlas Shrugged and I love it. So to all those out there who condemn Ayn Rand for her beliefs (and mine) all I have to say is you don't understand, you are the people she says are evil in her books and you prove it when you bad mouth her.


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