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by jgrahamc 2951 days ago
Years ago when I was living in the Bay Area, Tom Wolfe was hanging around doing research for a book on Silicon Valley. The rumour was that he left with the opinion that nothing interesting worth writing about happened there.
3 comments

His daughter, Alexandra Wolfe, did write a book about SV called "Valley of the Gods":

https://www.amazon.com/Valley-Gods-Silicon-Story/dp/15011470...

I haven't read it, but I subscribe to author Ryan Holiday's reading list email newsletter and he had this to say when the book came out:

"A nice new read about the Silicon Valley written by Wall Street Journal reporter (and Tom Wolfe's daughter). It's more pleasant and less cynical than Chaos Monkeys but probably a little more naive too. I was interested in the fate of the various Thiel Fellows since I've met a few of them over the years and was a college dropout myself. Wolfe makes the point that dropping out or getting one of these fellowships has become just as much of a 'track' as the Ivy League these days. Anyway, some great sentences in this book. Not sure how it will stand up over time but was worth a couple hours of my time."

> Anyway, some great sentences in this book. Not sure how it will stand up over time but was worth a couple hours of my time.

I'm not familiar with Ryan Holiday's work, but this almost sounds like a backhanded compliment, especially when you consider how long (and much work) it takes to write a passable book.

It's no longer about Alexandra's book; it's about Ryan's tight schedule.

It doesn't really read like it's meant to be praise or a compliment the same way, "eh, it was okay, but I wasn't blown away by it," isn't necessarily a compliment--a statement which I think is probably an accurate "synonym" to his original statement.
He wrote a pretty interesting profile of Robert Noyce, one of the co-founders of Intel

https://web.stanford.edu/class/e145/2007_fall/materials/noyc...

Thanks for the pointer. I was unaware of 1. how important midwesterners have been to Silicon Valley, and 2. how old the Silicon Valley-Wall Street cultural divide is. Plus, just a fun read.
It was a really great read. My dad was a solid state electrical engineer working on silicon, and went to Grinnell as well for his undergrad. We are from just south of there. Nice to hear about the place
Thank you, I had read that before and lost track of the authorship when I wanted to share with a colleague.

This is the single most elucidating thing written about the cultural matrix of Silicon Valley.

Yes but that's years before. I'm talking dotcom era.
When $300M of investment capital ends up in the $125,000 sale of a sock puppet mascot, was he (broadly speaking) wrong?

While big companies came out of that era, examined at the time and surrounded by since-deceased dotcom peers, I don't fault a reasonable person for concluding as he did.

Mike Judge has it covered.
Journalists and satirists have a very different definition of 'interesting'.
Journalists, satirists, and activists have a very different definition of many things. Those 3 categories are deliberately blurred in recent years. (Mike Judge is more of a "voice of reason" than many others in those categories, actually.)
Judge also had a better frame of reference, mind.