Editors Reads

Best Technology Books

Technology books at their best are not manuals — they explain how the tools remaking our world were built, who built them, and what they are doing to us. From the histories of Silicon Valley to clear-eyed accounts of artificial intelligence and surveillance, these are the books for understanding the defining force of the age.

21 expert-reviewed books

Editorial Top Picks

The Innovators book cover
Editor's Pick

The Innovators

by Walter Isaacson

4.5

A sweeping history of the digital revolution — from Ada Lovelace and Charles Babbage through Alan Turing, Claude Shannon, William Shockley, and the personal computer pioneers — arguing that the most important innovations were always the product of collaboration, not lone genius.

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Algorithms to Live By book cover
Editor's Pick

Algorithms to Live By

by Brian Christian and Tom Griffiths

4.4

Computer science algorithms offer surprisingly practical guidance for everyday human decisions — from optimal stopping to the explore-exploit tradeoff to how to sort your email.

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The Age of Surveillance Capitalism book cover
Editor's Pick
4.4

Harvard Business School professor Shoshana Zuboff's landmark analysis of how Google, Facebook, and the surveillance economy extract human behavioural data as a raw material, process it into prediction products, and sell certainty about future behaviour to advertisers and others.

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Life 3.0 book cover
Editor's Pick

Life 3.0

by Max Tegmark

4.3

MIT physicist Max Tegmark explores the landscape of possible futures as artificial intelligence approaches and then surpasses human-level intelligence — and what choices humanity must make now.

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Chip War book cover
Bestseller

Chip War

by Chris Miller

4.5

Economic historian Chris Miller traces the history of the semiconductor industry from the invention of the transistor to the US-China technology war, showing how computer chips became the defining resource of the twenty-first century.

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Zero to One book cover
Bestseller

Zero to One

by Peter Thiel

4.5

Peter Thiel — PayPal co-founder, first outside Facebook investor — argues that true progress comes from creating something genuinely new (0 to 1), not copying what already works (1 to n). A contrarian framework for building companies that matter.

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Elon Musk book cover
Bestseller

Elon Musk

by Walter Isaacson

4.3

Walter Isaacson's biography of Elon Musk, based on two years of access and hundreds of interviews, covering Tesla, SpaceX, Twitter, and the tortured psychology behind his drive.

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Hooked book cover
Bestseller

Hooked

by Nir Eyal

4.2

Nir Eyal presents the Hook Model — a four-step framework for building habit-forming products used by technology companies to create user engagement.

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How to Avoid a Climate Disaster book cover
Bestseller
4.1

Bill Gates lays out a comprehensive framework for understanding the climate crisis — who emits what, which sectors are hardest to decarbonize, and what combination of existing technology and needed breakthroughs can plausibly get global emissions to zero. The book is part primer, part investment thesis, and part call to action.

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Inspired book cover

Inspired

by Marty Cagan

4.4

The definitive guide to modern technology product management — how the best product teams at companies like Amazon, Google, and Netflix discover and deliver products that customers love.

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Hatching Twitter book cover

Hatching Twitter

by Nick Bilton

4.3

The untold story of how four friends — Jack Dorsey, Ev Williams, Biz Stone, and Noah Glass — created Twitter and then destroyed their friendships fighting for control of it.

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A World Without Email book cover

A World Without Email

by Cal Newport

4.2

Cal Newport argues that the inbox-driven, always-on workday is not a productivity system but an accident of history — one that fragments attention, exhausts cognitive resources, and can be replaced by intentionally designed workflows that produce far more output with less overhead.

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Crossing the Chasm book cover

Crossing the Chasm

by Geoffrey A. Moore

4.2

The definitive guide to the critical gap in technology adoption — the chasm between early adopters and the mainstream market — and how to cross it.

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Super Pumped book cover

Super Pumped

by Mike Isaac

4.2

New York Times reporter Mike Isaac's definitive account of Uber's spectacular rise and reckoning. From Travis Kalanick's ruthless ambition to the toxic culture, surveillance, and scandals that nearly destroyed the company, Super Pumped is a gripping, deeply reported portrait of Silicon Valley at its most aggressive.

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The Cold Start Problem book cover
4.2

A comprehensive framework for understanding and building network effects — the most powerful and most misunderstood force in technology — from a partner at Andreessen Horowitz who has studied them across dozens of companies.

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The Shallows book cover

The Shallows

by Nicholas Carr

4.2

Nicholas Carr's Pulitzer Prize finalist argues that the internet is reshaping human cognition — training brains for distraction, skimming, and rapid switching at the expense of deep reading and sustained thought.

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