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Atlas Shrugged is, in essence, 1100 pages of intensely character-driven philosophy. It's probably not the sort of book most people read with slash in mind. I'm not sure how they avoid it, though. It is quite possibly the single slashiest novel I have ever read. Ever.
Allow me to demonstrate.
Hank Rearden and Francisco d'Anconia. Both of them are in love with the same woman -- Dagny Taggart (who, we might observe, is herself scarcely female in anything but physical appearance). Hank owns a steel mill. Francisco owns copper mines. In the end, Dagny chooses to go with another man entirely -- and neither Hank nor Francisco resents this at all. Because of their philosophy, you see.
And also, clearly, because they are in love.
I've put the slashiest bits in bold, by the way, since there are so damned many. You have no idea how much slashiness I left out of this post.
So. Let's begin at the beginning. Hank does not like Francisco before he meets him... but Francisco wins him over pretty damn quickly."Mr. Rearden," said a strangely quiet voice beside him, "permit me to introduce myself. My name is d'Anconia."
Rearden turned, startled; d'Anconia's manner and voice had a quality he had seldom encountered before: a tone of authentic respect.And immediately, Hank becomes uncharacteristically desperate.Rearden's startled glance at him was like the involuntary thrust of a hand grasping for support in a desperate need. The glance betrayed how much he wanted to find the sort of man he thought he was seeing. Then Rearden lowered his eyes; almost closing the***owly, shutting out the vision and the need. His face was hard; it had an expression of severity, an inner severity directed at himself; it looked austere and lonely.Hank spends a lot of time trying not to like Francisco, and succeeds pretty well... until the very next time he runs into him.It was the muscles of his own face that made Rearden realize the nature of his reaction to Francisco's arrival: he noticed suddenly that he was smiling and that his face had been relaxed into the dim well-being of a smile for some minutes past, as he watched Francisco d'Anconia in the crowd.
He acknowledged to himself, for the first time, all the half-grasped, half-rejected moments when he had thought of Francisco d'Anconia and thrust the thought aside before it became the knowledge of how much he wanted to see him again. [...] He had caught himself glancing through the newspapers to see whether Francisco d'Anconida had returned to New York--and he had thrown the newspapers aside, asking himself angrily: What if he did return?--would you go chasing him through night clubs and cocktail parties?--what is it that you want from him?
This was what he had wanted--he thought, when he caught himself smiling at the sight of Francisco in the crowd--this strange feeling of expectation that held curiosity, amusement, and hope.
2011年10月28日 04点10分