Books

Steve Jobs

A biography that captures both the brilliance and the cost of uncompromising product vision.

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Isaacson had rare access, which means this biography lets Jobs stay brilliant, difficult, petty, magnetic, and impossible to simplify. That messiness is not a flaw in the book. It is the point.

What stayed with me

What stayed with me was Jobs’s insistence that products are emotional as well as technical. He seemed to understand that design is not decorative. It is the shape of the user’s trust in the thing.

What it changed

It changed how I think about standards. Not every aspect of Jobs is admirable, but the book sharpened my sense that strong products usually come from people who are willing to be unusually specific about what good feels like.

Why I still keep it on the shelf

I still think about this biography whenever a product feels competent but forgettable. Jobs reminds me that memorable work is often made by people willing to care past the point of convenience.