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The eagle-eyed groovy gal
Barb Williams from
Memphis, Tennessee (who is becoming one of our regular contributors to the blog) recently sent me the following email:
"Bill,
I was just looking over the site to see if you had the
Scranton reference in
'Atlas Shrugged' accounted for. I'm rereading it now to find it. I'm pretty sure it's in the last third of the book, so it may take me a while to get there. My best recollection is that it comes in a quote fom heroine
Dagny Taggert saying something about how important it was to get coal moving from
Scranton."
First published in 1957, the classic novel
Atlas Shrugged was
Ayn Rand's last work of fiction before concentrating her writings exclusively on philosophy and politics. It tells the story of a powerful railroad executive, Dagny Taggart, who struggles to keep her business alive while society is crumbling around her. According to a joint survey conducted by the
Library of Congress and the
Book of the Month Club, Atlas Shrugged is the "second most influential book for Americans today" after the Bible.
Scranton is mentioned on page 836 (the book totals 1168 pages):
"Miss Taggart," said Eddie, in a resonant tone of severity, the tone of slapping the man into the manners of a drawing room he had never entered, "may I present Mr. Meigs?"
"How d' do," said the man without interest, then turned to Eddie and proceeded, as if she were not present: "You just take the Comet off the schedule for tomorrow and Tuesday, and shoot the engines to Arizona for the grapefruit special, with the rolling stock from the
Scranton coal run I mentioned. Send the orders out at once."
A film version of Atlas Shrugged is in
preproduction and is slated for release sometime in 2008, with
Angelina Jolie currently in talks to play the role of Dagny Taggart. Only a year to wait and see if
Scranton will be mentioned in passing in the film.
To place a hold on the novel
Atlas Shrugged by
Ayn Rand,
click here.
Much thanks again to the incandescent
Barb Williams for this
Scranton reference. Keep 'em comin'!