
İnsanın egosu, ilerleyişinin kaynağıdır.

by Ayn Rand
The Fountainhead is Ayn Rand's novel about Howard Roark, an architect whose refusal to compromise places him against clients, critics, committees, and a culture built on imitation. Through Roark, Dominique Francon, Gail Wynand, and Peter Keating, the book dramatizes independence, ambition, creative integrity, and the moral cost of seeking approval. Rand turns architecture into a battlefield of values.
Readers interested in philosophical fiction, individualism, and novels of ideas will find The Fountainhead forceful and deliberately provocative. Ayn Rand writes with polemical clarity, asking whether greatness can survive social pressure without surrendering its source. The novel's intensity comes from treating buildings as visible arguments about the soul of their maker. Its conflicts are aesthetic, romantic, and ideological at once.
2 posts from the Bookspace community

İnsanın egosu, ilerleyişinin kaynağıdır.

Onların tüm ilgisi insanlara dönük. "bu doğru mu?" diye sormuyorlar. yani yargılamak için değil, tekrarlamak için. yapmak için değil, yapıyormuş izlenimi vermek için. yaratmak değil, göstermek. yetenek değil, dostluk. nitelik değil, fors.