Time Will Run Back

Here is a splendid novel by Henry Hazlitt, first published in 1951 and revised in 1966. The plot line explores the economic theories of capitalism and socialism.
It begins in a fully socialist society in which the new leader, who finds himself in that position only by accident, begins to rethink the economic basis of the system. He first begins to wonder whether the economy is doing well at all, and how they might discover this. This sets the leadership on a path to thinking about prices and ... (show more)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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  • it is totally creepy that the themes of 1984 were also being written at about the same time by a noted economist. makes you take the fears you see in both this book and orwell a bit more seriously.

    i do wish that this book did not have several chapters of just two guys having economic debates, but, hey, i got through it.

    my favorite aspect of this book is it makes the idea of freedom and personal liberty an innate quality of humanity, which i very much agree with - or at least hope... (show more)

     
    by Laura on Sep 01, 2009 at 12:12AM

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  • Fiction is not Hazlitt's strongest suit, but character development is not really the point here. Hazlitt effectively shows that if capitalism were eradicated, the modern economy would have to reinvent it, step by step, to avoid a complete collapse. This book is Ludwig von Mises's calculation argument fictionalized.

     
     
    by Jason on Nov 21, 2009 at 06:12PM

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