startup culture

16-bit pixel art illustration depicting the Theranos scandal, showing Elizabeth Holmes holding a blood vial, malfunctioning lab equipment, journalists, and warning screens, inspired by Bad Blood by John Carreyrou.
Books

Bad Blood Book Review John Carreyrou

Bad Blood is a gripping, meticulously reported account of the Theranos scandal and a powerful indictment of Silicon Valley’s obsession with vision over verification. John Carreyrou reveals how storytelling, prestige, and fear silenced skepticism, turning a failed technology into a multibillion-dollar illusion. Essential reading for anyone serious about leadership, governance, and ethical business.

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16-bit video game–style pixel art showing a charismatic founder celebrating on a virtual stage, surrounded by cheering employees, WeWork screens, stacks of cash, burning IPO papers, and warning alerts, inspired by The Cult of We.
Books

The Cult of We Book Review Eliot Brown Maureen Farrell

The Cult of We is a penetrating examination of WeWork’s rise and near-collapse, revealing how charisma, culture, and unchecked capital distorted fundamentals and governance. Eliot Brown and Maureen Farrell expose the dangers of narrative-driven valuation and founder worship, making this book essential reading for anyone serious about leadership, finance, and sustainable growth.

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16-bit SNES-style pixel art of a muscular businessman with curly copper-red hair in a pinstripe suit and sunglasses, standing confidently on a trading floor surrounded by stock tickers, digital coins, and chaotic market activity.
Books

The Best Business Books on Technology, Silicon Valley, and Modern Capitalism

Modern capitalism didn’t unravel overnight. It optimized itself there. This reading list examines the true mechanics behind Silicon Valley, platform power, and financialized growth, where narrative often outruns evidence and systems reward belief over accountability. From Theranos to WeWork, Facebook to crypto, these books reveal how confidence, capital, and concentrated power quietly hollow institutions long before collapse becomes visible.

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