Home :: Books :: Teens  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens

Travel
Women's Fiction
Fountainhead

Fountainhead

List Price: $17.60
Your Price: $12.32
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 .. 78 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An excellent novel
Review: The Fountainhead is an excellent book for many different kinds of people, this is one of the few Classics that truly inspired me. The romantic (as in the genre, not love) character of Howard Roark and his struggles to go beyond the ideals that everyone else has always held on to, to achieve the ultimate in architecture. He attempts to add a new idea to the world, and it won't accept it.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Glorified Trash
Review: The Fountainhead is neither brilliant nor well-written. It is overly long (but not as disasterously as Atlas Shrugged) and the characters are stock-issue that exist to forcefully move along Rand's "point". The philosophy that emanates from Rand's work--Objectivism--is very shallow and extremely selfish. It resonates with cold-war hysteria that fails to take into account the base needs of others and the very concept of interpersonal relationships. She reduces women to vessels for reproduction, and spits on the very concept of love and giving. She is a vicious shrew, and this comes across quite clearly in this book and her others.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A great monumental novel
Review: I won't be long with this one because the book is. You have got to read this. It sums up what people are really like in today's society even though it was published in 1943. Rand's objectivism is well thought out in this novel and simply saying, there are two types of people those who have read Ayn Rand and those who haven't.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Brilliant Refute to the Collectivism that Plagues America
Review: The Fountainhead truely captures the essence of capitalism that the founders of America held so dear. The hero of the novel, Howard Roark, exemplifies the spirit of the self and capitalism. The ideal he holds dear is living life for oneself. Roark says in a trial summation "His [man's] vision, his strength, his courage came from his own spirit. A man's spirit, however, is his self." Roark struggles in a mindless society where humans give their souls to anyone. The villain is Ellsworth Toohey, a man who feeds off the weak-minded. His true ambition is to control the minds and souls of people so he will be projected to the forefront of society. He preaches theorys of altruism and collectivism which place him at the top of civilization. Rand uses Roark to refute the communistic philosophy that destroys man's self. Roark stands against the illogical notion of communism that overtook pre and post World War II Europe and Asia. The ideas of socialistic practices have penetrated the minds of Americans and they will be a crucial step towards forfeiting or preserving freedom. Roark tries to make this clear for the people who still have a chance at living life for themselves.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Benevolent View of Life
Review: I was struck by how little Rouke allows himself to suffer. He looks at pain in the same way that he looks at everything else; as something to be understood, and then move on. I particularly liked Roukes response to evil, when the unscrupulous Ellsworth T. asks him at a party "What do you think of me"? Rouke replys, "I never think of you". Rouke is very unique in this repect. He seems to be able to step outside himself and look at the irrational objectively. Once he understands it; it becomes impotent to hurt him any longer.

Evil and pain don't rate very high in Rouke's life. Whereas many of my friends, aquaintences and family members constantly horriblize over events that happened years ago. They carry these painful events around with them like prized battle scars. They refuse to try to understand them. They are not curious in the lest about the nature of their own suffering, and therefore, never solve them; keeping their suffering as the only evidence that they are alive.

Rouke, on the other hand, rejects suffering as a way of life. And for this reason he is able to live a happy life and achieve his highest values. As opposed to the millions upon millions of pituful misshapened lives left in the wake of religion - which teaches us, not to be happy and live, but to suffer and die.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Compelling and Thought Provoking
Review: This book causes controversy in every aspect, because it chooses to analyze the depths of the human psyche. As one of my dear friends put it, "it is either the most or the least moral novel ever written, but I cannot discern which it is." After reading the final pages, I was transfixed... not by Ayn Rand's theories of objectivism (I disagreed on some points), but on the character of Howard Rourke, a person "an end in himself". Rand's portrayl of Rourke left my heart both broken and healed. Buy this book. Make the moral decision for yourself about the quality of the book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Roark vs. Toohey
Review: "~I enjoyed this book immensely. However, most of the reviews for this book focus on Roark. I think Ellsworth M. Toohey was a more incredible character. Roark and Toohey were both two independent people, but I envy the way Toohey used people to give himself more power. Just knowing the fact that he is "smaller" than them is just what they need to survive. They all used him. They could care less about him. I'm sure they all could've easily lived without Keating. They took advantage of Keating's weakness...but hey, who wouldn't?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A masterpiece
Review: I've read this book in a Dutch translation. It was the first time I heard of Ayn Rand.This book was marvellous to read. The story of Roark is one of the victory of the individual over the mass. It is about a person's integrity, so difficult to keep in a society like ours. It was a great surprise to me to discover that this book was written in the first half of the century and moreover by a woman. Nor the subject, nor the style of writing can indicate this. The subject is timeless. I can understand some don't like this book very much because in this real world we don't often meet people like Roark. He belongs to a novel. We don't have to compare ourselves or others with such an ideal character. It didn't spoil my reading and I can only recommend this novel very much.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Love Ayn Rand, but what a horrible novel!
Review: I've read Rand's other three books of fiction over the years, and they are some of the greatest novels I've ever read. I just finished "The Fountainhead", and I cannot believe this is the same person who penned "Atlas Shrugged" or "We the Living".

I think the main problem is that she's struggling to incorporate a more formal version of her philosophy into a fiction work. That's a great goal (and she succeeds in "Atlas Shrugged"), but here she 'tells' way more than she 'shows'. I felt insulted as a reader as she tried to lead me by the nose!

The novel reads like a rough draft that needed more editing, and it has none of the strengths of her other works. None of the characters are appealing. The plot is uneven - it lurches forward only to stagnate for dozens of pages. The overall tone of the book was depressing and venomous to no apparent purpose, thematic or otherwise.

Worst of all, some of the action was just competely unbelievable. For instance: Roark taking on the housing project that sets up the final conflict in the novel was a transparent plot device. It didn't seem to be something he would do - either philosophically or from common sense. Why would he trust the people he trusts in taking on that project?

I pushed through to the end, but I was so happy when the novel was over. Worst of all, I really don't think Rand succeeded in presenting Objectivism or an exalted sense of life. The novel was too negative and soggy with bile to do either.

Ayn Rand is a brilliant novelist, but "The Fountainhead" is easily one of my least favorite books. Read her others; they're incedible!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Inspiring
Review: A wonderful look into the passion of architecture...and some other philosophical stuff as well.


<< 1 .. 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 .. 78 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates