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Ayn Rand and the World She Made

by Anne C. Heller

Early in Ayn Rand and the World She Made, Anne C. Heller describes Rand's large, dark eyes as "exquisite." I'm not sure I agree.

Judging from the cover portrait, Rand had the eyes of a hawk between meals – a predator that is well fed, but far from satisfied. I was surprised to learn that she owned a cat. I can more easily imagine Rand devouring it than rubbing it behind the ears.

I'm being unfair, not so much to Rand as to this splendid account. Heller has taken the forbidding author of the novels The Fountainhead and Atlas Shrugged and made her real, a person of greater complexity than Rand herself would admit. Her book appears simultaneously with Jennifer Burns' Goddess of the Market: Ayn Rand and the American Right (Oxford University Press; 369 pages; $27.95), and the two are often reviewed together. It is no slight to Burns' well-regarded study to say that Heller's biography deserves its own review.

Her subject is not an easy one. Rand was aggressively polarizing. Over the years, she deliberately eliminated any room for common ground. She wrote stylized parables with heroic, superior individuals who battled the envious, collectivist mob. She saw altruism as evil and selfishness as good. No nuance for her.

As a result, readers tend to either adore or despise Rand. One of Heller's achievements, then, is to take Rand's ideas seriously, without falling into adulation or derision. Indeed, she crafts a narrative that gains force from its engagement with Rand's writing. Yet this is very much the story of Rand's life, underscoring the contradictions between her strident philosophy and her very human, very messy existence.

Rand was born Alissa Zinovievna Rosenbaum to middle-class Jewish parents in St. Petersburg, Russia, in 1905. From the start, she was extraordinarily headstrong and intelligent. Later she would insist that she was entirely original, that her philosophy was her own creation, that she had erased the past. But Heller convincingly argues that growing up Russian, and Jewish in Russia, shaped Rand's outlook to the end.

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November 3, 2009

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