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Jul 08, 2003 | ISBN 9781588363046
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Praise
“Of all the writers who emerged from the San Francisco scene in the 1990s, no one has rendered the characters and contours of digital culture with more spirit and nuance than Gary Wolf. Here he turns his sharp eye, nimble pen, and sly sense of humor on a story he knows from the inside out — the story not simply of the most influential American magazine since Rolling Stone, but of the strange, exhilirating, singular era that magazine did so much to interpret and define — and the result is captivating. Wired: A Romance is a terrific tale, well told.” – John Heilemann, author of Pride Before the Fall: The Trials of Bill Gates and the End of the Microsoft Era
“Louis Rossetto’s Wired was that rarest of birds: a magazine that actually changed the way people thought about the world. Gary Wolf brilliantly brings to life the romance of Wired’s early days, the sheer audaciousness of Rossetto in action, and the galvanizing effect of the magazine’s overamped, self-consciously revolutionary vision of technology. At the same time, he shows how ill-equipped Wired was to deal with success, and how the magazine got swept away by the excesses of the very boom it had helped create. Wolf captures the sheer exhilaration of working on a labor of love, and the exhaustion that sets in when you realize that love isn’t enough. In the process, he helps us understand the dream that was at the heart of the nineties boom, and why, even after the bubble has burst, it remains so hard to abandon.” -James Surowiecki, business columnist for The New Yorker
“Every happy business is alike, and every unhappy business is unhappy in its own way; Wired was apparently both. Gary Wolf has produced a smart, knowing, tough-minded, virtually Tolstoyan chronicle of the media incarnation of the digital revolution. Like so many recent entrepreneurial rise-and-fall stories, it’s a feverish tale of idealism and selfishness, brilliant intuitions and dumbfounding hubris, global ambitions and parochial bumbling. Unlike so many of the smoke-and-mirrors entities it helped make famous, however, Wired produced something well-made, useful and enduring — yet alone among those iconic 90s enterprises, could never persuade the hysterical capital markets to throw any hysterical capital its way. The irony is classic.” –Kurt Andersen, author of Turn of the Century
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