Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T08:10:32.378Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Sky above and the Mud below: Two Books about Steve Jobs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 February 2021

Extract

Steve Jobs was the most charismatic businessperson in the modern era. When he died, on October 5, 2011, Apple was inundated with condolence messages from all over the United States and from around the world. These notes were sent not only to Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California, but to Apple retail stores. The stores posted them on their windows. In addition, bouquets of flowers were brought to the stores. Think of this—flowers in front of hundreds of stores in dozens of countries because of Jobs's death. No one knows how many notes were received at Apple and in the stores. According to the “Remembering Steve” page on Apple.com, “Over a million people from all over the world have shared their memories, thoughts, and feelings about Steve.” As he was dying, people made a pilgrimage to his home in Palo Alto. His daughter has written that “a few people he didn’t know came to the doors wanting to see him … , wandering into the garden. … A stranger in a sari begged to talk with him. A man came in through the gate and said he had flown in from Bulgaria just to see my father.” After Jobs's death, California governor Jerry Brown declared October 16 to be “Steve Jobs Day.” The president of United States and the First Lady, Barack and Michelle Obama, posted a condolence note. Nothing remotely like this outpouring had ever taken place on the occasion of the death of an American CEO.

Type
Review Essay
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 2021

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 “Remembering Steve Jobs,” Apple.com, https://www.apple.com/stevejobs/.

2 Lisa Brennan-Jobs, Small Fry: A Memoir (New York, 2018), e-book.

3 Bryan Anthony Hernandez, “California Declares Oct. 16 Steve Jobs Day,” Mashable, 14 Oct. 2011; Hayley Tsu Kayama, “Steve Jobs Dies: Reaction to His Death,” Washington Post, 15 Oct. 2011.

4 Katie Marsal, “Steve Jobs Biography Is Amazon's Best Selling Book of 2011,” appleinsider.com, n.d., https://appleinsider.com/articles/11/12/06/steve_jobs_biography_is_amazons_best_selling_book_of_2011; Wikipedia, s.v. “Walter Isaacson,” last modified 26 Nov. 2020, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_Isaacson.

5 Isaacson, Walter, Steve Jobs (New York, 2011), xxGoogle Scholar.

6 Isaacson, xx, xix.

7 Maurice Timothy Reidy, “I-Visionary,” America, 28 May 2012.

8 Evgeny Morozov, “Form and Fortune,” New Republic, 13 Mar. 2012.

9 Isaacson, 98.

10 Levy, Steven, The Perfect Thing: How the iPod Shuffles Commerce, Culture, and Coolness (New York, 2006)Google Scholar, e-book.

11 Levy, 413–14.

12 Isaacson, 526–27.

13 Ian Parker, “The Shape of Things to Come: How an Industrial Designer Became Apple’s Greatest Product,” New Yorker, 16 Feb. 2015.

14 Quoted in Schlender, Brent and Tetzeli, Rick, Becoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart into a Visionary Leader (New York, 2015), 392Google Scholar.

15 Kocienda, Ken, Creative Selection: Inside Apple's Design Process during the Golden Age of Steve Jobs (New York, 2018)Google Scholar, e-book.

16 Catmull, Ed, Creativity, Inc.: Overcoming the Unseen Forces That Stand in the Way of True Inspiration (New York, 2014), 303Google Scholar.

17 Kahney, Leander, Tim Cook: The Genius Who Took Apple to the Next Level (New York, 2019)Google Scholar, e-book.

18 Quoted in Schlender and Tetzeli, Becoming Steve Jobs, 392.

19 Schlender and Tetzeli, 132.

20 Schlender and Tetzeli, 173.

21 Schlender and Tetzeli, 174; Catmull, e-book.

22 Schlender and Tetzeli, 143–44.

23 Schlender and Tetzeli, 144.

24 Isaacson, 271.

25 Brennan, Chrisann, The Bite in the Apple: A Memoir of My Life with Steve Jobs (New York, 2013)Google Scholar, e-book.

26 Schlender and Tetzeli, Becoming Steve Jobs, 408–409.

27 Schlender and Tetzeli, 215.

28 Schlender and Tetzeli, 368–79.

29 See Schlender and Tetzeli, 380–81, “Steve was the informal leader… .”

30 Stross, Randall E., Steve Jobs and the NeXT Big Thing (New York, 1993)Google Scholar, e-book.

31 Stross, e-book.

32 Stross, e-book.

33 Catmull, 55–56.

34 Catmull, 60.

35 Catmull, 61–62.

36 Catmull, 298.

37 Levy, Perfect Thing, e-book.

38 Levy, e-book.

39 Levy, e-book.

40 Kocienda, e-book.

41 Kocienda, e-book.

42 Katy Waldman, “‘Small Fry,’ Reviewed: Lisa Brennan-Jobs's Mesmerizing, Discomfiting Memoir,” New Yorker, 16 Sep. 2018. See also Nellie Bowles, “In ‘Small Fry,’ Steve Jobs Comes Across as a Jerk. His Daughter Forgives Him. Should We?,” New York Times, 23 Aug. 2018.

43 Waldman, “‘Small Fry,’ Reviewed.”

44 Brennan-Jobs, e-book.

45 Brennan-Jobs, e-book.

46 Schlender and Tetzeli, 171.

47 de Cervantes, Miguel, Don Quixote (London, 2014)Google Scholar, e-book.

48 Gabler, Neal, Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination (New York, 2006)Google Scholar.

49 Isaacson, Steve Jobs, 567.

50 Patrick Vlaskovits, “Henry Ford, Innovation, and that ‘Faster Horse’ Quote,” Harvard Business Review, 28 Aug. 2011.

51 Tedlow, Richard S., Giants of Enterprise: Seven Business Innovators and the Empires They Built (New York, 2001), 176Google Scholar.

52 Lewis, David L., The Public Image of Henry Ford: An American Folk Hero and His Company (Detroit, 1976), 476Google Scholar.

53 Diamond, Sigmund, The Reputation of the American Businessman (Cambridge, MA, 1955), 143CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

54 Nevins, Allan and Hill, Frank Ernest, Ford: Expansion and Challenge, 1915–1933 (New York, 1957), 388Google Scholar.

55 Livesay, Harold C., American Made: Shapers of the American Economy (Upper Saddle River, NJ, 2012), 181Google Scholar.

56 Livesay, 179.

57 Fierstein, Ronald K., A Triumph of Genius: Edwin Land, Polaroid, and the Kodak Patent War (Chicago, 2015)Google Scholar, e-book.

58 Economist, “Why Steve Jobs Said Meeting the Founder of Polaroid Was ‘Like Visiting a Shrine,’” Business Insider, 29 Mar. 2015.

59 Christopher Bonanos, “The Man Who Inspired Jobs,” New York Times, 7 Oct. 2011; Bonanos, Instant: The Story of Polaroid (New York, 2012), e-book; Fierstein, Triumph of Genius, e-book.

60 Michael Wolff, “Is There Anything That Can Trip Up Steve Jobs?,” Newser.com and VanityFair.com, 19 July 2010, cited in Isaacson, Steve Jobs, 523.