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Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson Review: A Monumental Authorized Biography Worth Reading
Walter Isaacson's *Steve Jobs* is the authorized biography of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, built on more than forty interviews with Jobs over two years and over one hundred additional interviews with family members, friends, colleagues, competitors, and adversaries. Released by Simon & Schuster on October 24, 2011 — nineteen days after Jobs's death — it stands as a comprehensive, unflinching account of a figure who reshaped personal computers, animated movies, music, phones, tablet computing, and digital publishing. A worldwide bestseller, it is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand both the creative genius and the deeply flawed humanity of one of the most consequential figures in modern technological history.
LuvemBooks Verdict
Best for
Readers who want the most authoritative, access-rich account of Steve Jobs's life — from Apple's founding through his death — including the internal workings of Silicon Valley's most mythologised company and the personal costs of Jobs's relentless perfectionism.
Worth it if
You want to understand not just what Jobs built but how he actually operated — and you value vivid, anecdote-driven biography grounded in more than 140 interviews conducted with Jobs's own encouragement to speak honestly.
Skip if
You're seeking a rigorous critical deconstruction of the Jobs mythology rather than a deeply sourced but ultimately subject-adjacent portrait that The Guardian noted was "designed to serve the cult" around him.
What readers & critics say
The Guardian called the book "monumental" and "studded with moments that make you go 'wow,'" while also noting that corporate PR language — particularly the word "passion" — periodically pulls Isaacson's prose toward press-release register. The New York Times found it does "its solid best" to match its extraordinary subject, describing Jobs as "a brilliant and protean creator," and Kirkus Reviews concluded that Isaacson's "impeccably researched, vibrant biography" amounts to a portrait that is, "to quote Jobs, insanely great," even if the narrative could have used a tighter edit in places.
“The empty vocabulary of corporate PR sometimes seeps into Isaacson's prose, as exemplified by the recurrence of the word 'passion.'”
— The Guardian“Jobs, the brilliant and protean creator… He gave Mr. Isaacson a chance to play by the same rules. 'Steve Jobs' does its solid best.”
— The New York Times“Isaacson's portrait of this complex, often unlikable genius is, to quote Jobs, insanely great.”
— Kirkus Reviews“Steve Jobs is not literature, but it is a good book, but alas with several holes and egregious errors.”
— Daring FireballIn This Review
- What Works & What Doesn't
- What the Book Is and How It Was Made
- The Subject: A Businessman of Astonishing Flair
- Strengths: Access, Candor, and Defining Anecdotes
- Limitations: Prose and Framing
- Who This Book Is For
What Works & What Doesn't
What Works
- Built on more than forty interviews with Jobs himself and over one hundred interviews with family, colleagues, adversaries, and competitors, giving it a depth of access rare in authorized biography
- Jobs waived editorial control over content and encouraged interviewees to speak honestly, lending the book unusual candor for an authorized account
- Captures Jobs's personality through vivid, specific anecdotes — such as the famous hospital mask episode — rather than abstraction
- Chronicles major milestones in concrete detail, including the Apple IPO, the 1997 turnaround from a $1.04 billion loss, and the iTunes Store's launch figures
- Recognized as a worldwide bestseller and reviewed as a 'monumental' work by The Guardian
What Doesn't
- The Guardian's review noted that corporate PR language — particularly the word 'passion' — periodically weakens the prose, pulling it toward press-release register
- As The Guardian observed, the book was structured to serve the considerable cultural 'cult' around Jobs, which readers seeking sustained critical distance from his mythology may find limiting
What the Book Is and How It Was Made
The Subject: A Businessman of Astonishing Flair
Strengths: Access, Candor, and Defining Anecdotes
Limitations: Prose and Framing
Who This Book Is For
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & Further Reading
The key facts and claims in this review are grounded in the retrieved, verified sources listed below.
- Cited in this review
- 1
books.apple.com
- 2
ig.ft.com
- Further reading
- 3
Walter Isaacson, Wikipedia
- 4
en.wikipedia.org
- 5
nytimes.com
- 6
- 7
bookbrowse.com
- 8
theverge.com
- 9
bookmarks.reviews
- 10
themelodramaticbookworm.com
- 11
- 12
calvinrosser.com
- 13
getstoryshots.com
- 14
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