Ayn Rand and the World She Made - Anne C. Heller [307]
should not exceed 600,000 words: Letter to AR from BC (Bennett Cerf Collection, Columbia Rare Book and Manuscript Library, box 57).
“This is life as it should be”: JD, p. 202.
“They didn’t pretend to be converted”: TPOAR, p. 288.
“What I loved to do”: BC’s oral history interview, p. 943.
“she peers right through you”: BC’s oral history interview, p. 944.
“a remarkable woman”: Donald Klopfer, in an oral history interview on file at the Columbia University Oral History Project archives, number 1091, p. 79.
a spell of bright optimism: TPOAR, p. 290.
“I am challenging the cultural tradition”: TPOAR, p. 294.
“Whether or not the world”: Unpublished letter to AR from BB, August 29, 1951, courtesy of MSC.
foresaw a renaissance of political liberty: TPOAR, p. 294; author interview with NB, May 5, 2004.
Alan Greenspan: MYWAR, p. 167.
He often said that Ayn Rand put the moral basis: Author interview with JMB, March 23, 2004. “I was limited until I met her,” Greenspan wrote in his 2007 memoir, The Age of Turbulence (New York: Penguin Press). “Rand persuaded me to look at human beings, their values, how they work, what they do, and why they do it. … She introduced me to a vast realm from which I’d shut myself off” (p. 53).
Until 2008: NYT, October 23, 2008; TON, August 1963, p. 31.
early months of 1957: First draft of AS (Ayn Rand Papers, LOC, box 11, folders 10–12).
he would slip away to paint: TPOAR, p. 281; “Portrait of An Artist,” p. 1.
what she called his “exalted sense of life”: Facets of Ayn Rand, p. 119.
“There were no historical influences at all in his work”: WIAR, p. 230. Since this book was written under AR’s supervision and with her guidance, this view of FO’s originality was almost surely hers.
he enrolled in the Art Students League: Author correspondence with Stephanie Cassidy, archivist, Art Students League; Facets of Ayn Rand, pp. 118–19.
Robert Brackman and Robert Beverly Hale: Author interview with Don Ventura, March 19, 2004.
popular among the students: McConnell, “Recollections of Ayn Rand I.”
women, particularly, admired his good looks: TPOAR, p. 282.
“I did not yet know about his drinking”: MYWAR, p. 162.
Rand had honored her lover: About becoming AR’s “intellectual heir,” NB said in 2004, “[Now] I don’t know what it means, but I thought I did then. I guess it meant ‘the anointed one to carry on the tradition,’ ‘the keeper of the flame’” (author interview with NB, May 5, 2004).
“The idea of the greatest literary
masterpiece”: MYWAR, p. 194.
didn’t occur to him until later: MYWAR, pp. 176–77.
limit his freedom: Author interview with NB, April 6, 2008.
“my manifesto, my profession of faith”: Unpublished letter to Newman Flower, January 2, 1938 (quoted in EOA, p. 71).
had best-seller stamped all over it: Words & Faces, p. 261.
“contextual absolutism” and “contextualism”: Rand also used the word opsolitism to describe her philosophy in a 1961 speech at the University of Michigan.
“showed us how to live without truth”: Norman Podhoretz, “Intellectuals and Writers, Then and Now,” Partisan Review, Fall 2002 (vol. 69, no. 4), pp. 507–40.
“One word leads to another!”: “Ayn Rand and Atlas Shrugged,” recorded speech by BB, Cato Institute, Washington, D.C., October 6, 2007.
the last recorded concerto of Richard Halley: Halley’s Fifth Concerto was inspired by love songs from Boris Godunov, according to follower Howard Odzer (100 Voices, Howard Odzer, p. 191–92).
“drab” prose style and core ideas: Words & Faces, p. 262.
“Nobody’s going to read that [speech]”: BC’s oral history interview on file at the Columbia University Oral History Project archives (number 719, p. 950.)
to pay for the additional paper: Unpublished letter to AR from BC, May 9, 1957, Bennett Cerf Collection, Columbia Rare Book and Manuscript Library, box 57.
“an obsession with her”: Words & Faces, p. 261.
“They were putting a great deal [of money]”: Unpublished taped interview with Bertha Krantz,