Friday, December 4, 2009

Anthem

Writer: Ayn Rand
Genre: Fiction

The efforts I took to buy an original copy of this book were fruitful. Ayn Rand with her individualistic philosophy yet again! This time however, the book is just 100 pages long. Yeah, considering her epics like Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged this one is way too small but it can still hold you perplexed till the last page. If you are a hopeless fan of Rand that is!

Set in some dark age where mankind exists with its irrationality and collectivism you can’t help but notice the plural pronouns used as the book begins. Equality 7-2521, the protagonist is asked to be street sweeper by the World Council although he himself is more inclined towards becoming a scholar because of his undying curiosity. He, however, accepts the council’s decision and does his job religiously before he stumbles upon a tunnel left over from what the author terms as 'Unmentionable Times'. The discovery changes his course of life as he takes out time everyday to get into the tunnel, read scripts left behind and eventually rediscover electricity. He is soon caught and imprisoned for his transgression. He escapes and decides to submit his findings to the Word Council of Scholars with the hope that they will understand its importance.

The council however rejects his findings saying that they disrupt the equilibrium of their world. Disillusioned Equality 7-2521 runs into a forest where no man has been before and stays there and devours the manuscripts and ideas that he comes across in a house left back from the ‘Unmentionable Times'. He is joined by Liberty 5-3000 who is his love interest and understands his ideas and principles. The book ends as the protagonist rechristens himself as ‘Prometheus’ and discovers the meaning and usage of singular pronouns.

It’s crisp and talks of the same philosophy that her other classics spoke. For Rand fans, you need it in your collection definitely!

The classic line from the book –
"I need no warrant for being and no word of sanction upon my being. I am the warrant and the sanction."

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