Books
The Accidental Billionaires
A story about Facebook's founding years that makes ambition, status, exclusion, and speed feel inseparable.
Ben Mezrich tells Facebook’s origin story like status anxiety discovered venture scale. It is dramatic, sharp, a little mean, and honestly very readable because of all three.
What stayed with me
What stayed was how much status animates the story. The product is central, but so are exclusion, belonging, and rivalry. The technology matters because of the social world it intensifies.
What it changed
It changed how I read startup stories. I became more skeptical of purely meritocratic narratives and more interested in the emotional economies inside founding teams: resentment, access, aspiration, and recognition.
Why I still keep it on the shelf
I still think about this book because it makes the modern internet feel human in an uncomfortable way. It reminds you that platforms inherit the psychology of the people who built them.