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More oxford <strong>books</strong> @ www.OxfordeBook.<strong>com</strong><strong>Fore</strong> <strong>more</strong> <strong>urdu</strong> <strong>books</strong> <strong>visit</strong> <strong>www.4Urdu</strong>.<strong>com</strong>A NEW CREDO OF FREEDOM 75columnist for the New York Herald Tribune. Rand sent Paterson an invitationto their meeting and followed up with a brief <strong>visit</strong> to her office.They had a cordial conversation, but Paterson explained that it was herpolicy not to join any group. Rand was surprised when, a few weeks later,Paterson found her home phone number and asked if they might meetagain. More than twenty years Rand’s senior, the divorced and childlessPaterson had a formidable reputation. She had published several successfulnovels but wielded true influence through her weekly column,“Turns with a Bookworm.” Written in a chatty, conversational style,Paterson’s column mixed literary gossip with book reviews and ran fortwenty-five years, from 1924 to 1949. 18Paterson had oddities to rival Rand’s. At parties she sat silently byherself, refusing to talk to anyone she deemed uninteresting. She wasopenly rude. A friend recounted a typical anecdote from a publisher’sluncheon given for a French author. After Paterson spoke disparaginglyof H. G. Wells,the Frenchwoman turned most charmingly to Isabel and said, “You see,my dear Miss Paterson, it has been my great honor, privilege and happinessto know Mr. Wells most closely, most intimately. We have livedtogether, Mr. Wells and I, for seven happy years on the Riviera as manand wife.” . . . Isabel then raised her lorgnette (being nearsighted as youknow) and carefully looked at the Frenchwoman, from the table levelslowly up and slowly down, and laying down the lorgnette she said, “I stillsay, H. G. Wells is a fool.” 19Abrasive behavior was part of Paterson’s shell and her persona, and itmade her legendary among New York writers. A mention in her columncould send book sales skyrocketing, but to curry favor with Patersonauthors had to risk incurring her wrath. Always a contrarian, by thetime of the Willkie campaign Paterson had be<strong>com</strong>e implacably opposedto Roosevelt. She peppered her columns with political <strong>com</strong>mentary, amove that cost her readers and, eventually, her column.Rand and Paterson’s political friendship quickly became personal.Paterson invited Rand to her country home in Connecticut, an “enormousjump in the relationship,” Rand remembered. “I was being verypolite and formal, since it’s just a political acquaintance. And she madeit personal in very quick order.” Initially hesitant, Rand soon found

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