the strain could cost her two or three days’ work: TPOAR, p. 255.
“When I’m writing”: JD, p. 120.
“What? What is it?”: Author interview with BB, November 2, 2006.
politely raised their hands: In and Out of Books, “Class of ‘43,” p. 136.
“It was the world of Atlas Shrugged”: Author interview with NB, August 10, 2004.
returned to their new studio apartment: TPOAR, p. 253–54.
some of Nathaniel’s relatives noticed: Author interview with NB’s sisters Florence Hirschfeld and EK, August 25, 2006. In a December 2005 interview, BB told the author that both NB’s and LP’s mothers were jealous of AR. “They knew that if [their sons] had to choose, they would probably choose Ayn.”
“he liked Ayn better than he liked her”: Author interview with Florence Hirschfeld, Jonathan Hirschfeld, and EK, August 25, 2006.
165 East Thirty-fifth Street: MYWAR, p. 100.
ELEVEN: THE IMMOVABLE MOVER: 1953–1957
“Only the man who extols”: AS, p. 454.
it hadn’t yet splintered: “Godless Capitalism,” pp. 359–85.
penthouse apartment of J. B Matthews: Author interview with William F. Buckley, Jr., June 12, 2006.
reformed Communist fellow-traveler: “J. B. Matthews, R.I.P.,” National Review, August 9, 1966. Matthews is credited with having coined the phrase “fellow-traveler” (Margit von Mises, My Years with Ludwig von Mises [Bel Air, Calif.: Arlington House, 1984], p. 157).
often stopped in at Matthews’s: “J. B. Matthews, R.I.P.”
first met McCarthy: Author correspondence with BB, who was present, September 17, 2008.
246 “Tell me your premises”: MYWAR, p. 185.
“singular”: Author interview with WFB, June 13, 2006.
“Mr. Buckley, you arrrr too intelligent”: WFB, “Recollection of Ayn Rand,” syndicated in the Chicago Sun-Times, March 13, 1982.
“That certainly is an icebreaker”: WFB, “Ayn Rand, R.I.P.” National Review, April 2, 1982, p. 380.
“I had just written a book about him”: The book was McCarthy and His Enemies: The Record and Its Meaning (Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing, 1954).
“an instantly communicable charm”: Author interview with WFB, June 12, 2006.
written in liturgical Latin, as a joke: “Ayn Rand, R.I.P.” p. 380.
payback for earlier leftist allegations: Discussed in Ralph Raico’s taped speech, “Murray Rothbard, Ludwig von Mises, and Ayn Rand,” Ludwig von Mises Institute lecture.
“Oh, I see. The Big Lie”: Author interview with JKT, May 21, 2004.
told a young friend: 100 Voices, Susan Ludel, p. 412.
“From an author who voted for him”: 100 Voices, Richard L. Phillips, p. 137.
reportedly didn’t vote: According to a student’s notes, LP told a class of philosophy students that Rand hadn’t voted in either election; notes courtesy of MSC.
Branden recalled her indignation: MYWAR, pp. 117–18.
“I was hard put to it when [Zhukor] insisted: Quoted in “No Invitations, Please,” Time, July 29, 1957.
“the noblest, freest country”: MYWAR, p. 118.
newly appointed editor of The Freeman: Beginning in 1950, ARs and IP’s mutual friend Leonard Read financed The Freeman through the Foundation for Economic Education, a libertarian think tank he founded, based in Irvington, New York. By the early 1950s, AR had broken with him, too, over a “pernicious” pamphlet he published called Roof or Ceilings? by Milton Friedman and George Stigler. Friedman, at that time a self-declared Keynesian, would become famous as an advocate of free markets, but he and AR continued to be at odds (Murray Rothbard, “Milton Friedman Unraveled,” 1971, reprinted in Journal of Libertarian Studies, Fall 2002). At the height of Friedman’s fame in 1979, they would appear on the same Phil Donahue show in May 1980.
Frank Meyer and Willie Schlamm: Interview with Bettina Bien Greaves, January 6, 2007.
Mises, as he was known: Though LVM would ordinarily be referred to as von Mises, his American admirers called him Mises.
didn’t see eye to eye: George Reisman, “Reisman on Murray Rothbard, Ludwig von Mises, and Ayn Rand,” speech presented to the Ludwig von Mises Institute.
dinner party he and Frances gave in 1941 or 1942: Unpublished letter from Henry Hazlitt to WFB, March 13, 1982, courtesy of Bettina Bien Greaves. Hazlitt, correcting Buckley’s errors in the National Review obituary of AR, tells the story and sets the date as approximately 1942. Over the years, Hazlitt recalled different dates for the famous argument, ranging from the early 1940s to 1950 (unpublished interviews with Hazlitt by Mrs. Greaves, courtesy of Mrs. Greaves), but in all other details the narrative remained the same.
assuming that they were arguing about the doctrine of natural rights: Author interview with Bettina Bien Greaves, December 22, 2006; also “Books,” TON, September 1963, p. 34.
peace was restored: Unpublished letter from Henry Hazlitt to WFB, March 13, 1982, courtesy of Bettina Bien Greaves.
during one of Hazlitt’s trips to Los Angeles: Author correspondence with BB, June 24, 2008.
“Did he really say man?”: Unpublished letter from Henry Hazlitt to WFB, March 13, 1982, courtesy of Bettina Bien Greaves.
irritated by Mises’s rejection of a moral … argument: MYWAR, p. 116.
“allowed normal human considerations”: MYWAR, p. 116.
with the Brandens in attendance: Author correspondence with BB, June 24, 2006.
He liked to stop by her apartment: Author interview with Richard Cornuelle, August 5, 2006.
and helped him to promote his books: Through the NBI Book Service.
Cornuelle was half relieved: Author interview with Richard Cornuelle, August 5, 2006.
added embellishment that she wept: That AR wept was a detail added by Frances Hazlitt, who was present at the dinner party, according to Bettina Bien Greaves, January 6, 2007.
requesting a written deniaclass="underline" NB wrote to LVM in response to a report that the conservative theorist Russell Kirk had told the story of “the silly little Jewish girl” during a lecture he gave at the University of Wisconsin in 1962. Unpublished letters from Winfred Blevins to NB, May 16, 1962, and from NB to LVM, June 20, 1962, both courtesy of Edward Hudgins.
Mises, then in his eighties, complied: Unpublished letter from LVM to Russell Kirk, July 5, 1962, courtesy of Edward Hudgins.