Anthem

By Ayn Rand

Anthem - Ayn Rand
  • Release Date: 1938-01-01
  • Genre: Sci-Fi & Fantasy
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 188 Ratings

Description

Anthem is the classic story about the consequences of social collectivism and the importance of individualism. Anthem has been described as "one of the most important prose poems ever written".

Reviews

  • Cannot put it down

    4
    By benbrenton
    This book by Ayn Rand is absolutely wonderful. The suspense is very good for someone who feels nervous. It is easily to read, seeing as how this is a last century piece of work. I suggest that a philosopher or science fiction nerd DEFINITELY reads this once in their lifetime. This should also be assigned in Elementary Schools.
  • 10/10

    5
    By Epic man12
    Classic. So great. Must read if you're an anarchist/socialist/poly sci major.
  • Review

    4
    By Domi830
    It is filled with action an mystery I just scion books but this book is awesome and wold recommend for everyone to read.
  • Terribly overpriced

    1
    By zoltan stacho
    The rabid jabbering of soulless virago.
  • Ok

    3
    By Beast swag daddy
    It had a good lesson, but the plot was too short barely any action. To be honest it was a waste of my three and a half hours. It's a good book to read if you need to find yourself
  • Anthem's Plot & My Review

    5
    By britt98hughes
    WHAT IT WAS ABOUT (without spoiling it): It's basically about a time in the future , but is like the Dark Ages again. They're forced to live in almost sort of an extreme-communist world and are not allowed to think about or speak of The Unmentionable Times (which is now, where man is smarter than ever before) They dont have names, they have numbers to identify them. They cant use words like "I" and "her". Instead they must use "we" and "they". They aren't allowed to be curious, question the system, or prefer one man over another (have friends). They must consider mankind as together and they can't prefer anything over another. One man is "cursed" to have a curious mind. He's assigned to be a Street Sweeper, but has the intelligence and desire to be a Scholar. This leads him to secretly break the laws, invent and rediscover things from the Unmentionable Times, even though that's not his assigned job. WHAT I THOUGHT: I loved the book. It was suspenseful yet nice and short. It kept you on edge, but was to the point as you started to realize certain things later into the book. It was less than 300 pages with 12 chapters.