- The Fountainhead - Wikipedia
Rand began The Fountainhead (originally titled Second-Hand Lives) following the completion of her first novel, We the Living, in 1934 That earlier novel was based in part on people and events familiar to Rand; the new novel, on the other hand, focused on the less-familiar world of architecture
- After Nearly 50 Years, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fountainhead Home Changes Hands
A preservation architect, Adams had owned the house, called Fountainhead, for nearly half a century (twice as long as its original owner, oil speculator J Willis Hughes)
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- FOUNTAINHEAD Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Thoreau was using fountainhead in its figurative sense—referring to morning as the “origin” of the day to follow—while also paying homage to its literal meaning, “the source of a stream” (the earliest sense of fountain being “a natural spring”)
- The Fountainhead – Expert Insights Free Copy | Ayn Rand Institute
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- The Fountainhead: Full Book Summary | SparkNotes
A short summary of Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead This free synopsis covers all the crucial plot points of The Fountainhead
- The Fountainhead | Ayn Rand, Objectivism, Individualism | Britannica
The Fountainhead, novel by Ayn Rand, published in 1943 An exposition of the author’s anticommunist philosophy of “objectivism,” The Fountainhead tells of the struggle of genius architect Howard Roark—said to be based on Frank Lloyd Wright—as he confronts conformist mediocrity
- About The Fountainhead - CliffsNotes
Having grown up in the totalitarian dictatorship of the Soviet Union, holding an impassioned belief in political freedom and the rights of the individual, Ayn Rand wrote The Fountainhead as a tribute to the creative freethinker
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