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Books I’ve Read In 2018

hunterwalk.com/2018/01/02/books-i-read-in-2018

hunterwalk January 3, 2018

Not gonna lie. All those “Books of 2017” posts made me kinda wishing I kept a list of my
own. No way for me to go back and figure out what I read last year (I give away most books
once I’ve completed them) so instead will make this a living post, where I add as I finish. If
we generously start 2018 on 12/26/2017, here’s what I’ve read so far in reverse-chron
order:

22) The Fixer: My Adventures Saving Startups From Death By Politics – Bradley Tusk
[non-fiction]

I first met Bradley when he was assembling tech community support for a potential
Bloomberg presidential run. Mayor Mike didn’t, but we became friends and I enjoyed
learning more about Bradley’s life and work.

21) The Outsiders: Eight Unconventional CEOs and Their Radically Rational Blueprint for
Success – William Thorndike [non-fiction]

This sat on my bookshelf for so many years. I think it was a gift – maybe Dave Morin? –
and I just needed to be in the mood. The value for me on this one was seeing how many of
the ideas that were originally considered “unconventional” have become mainstream –
such as measuring business to EBITDA.

20) Winners Take All: The Elite Charade of Changing the World – Anand Giridharadas
[non-fiction]

It’s an important topic but I can’t recommend this book. It would have been more powerful
if Anand focused on his own struggles to “give up power” while seeking commercial
outcomes for his work, but instead he does it through observing others. His discussions
with Ann Cuddy were very good but the other anecdotes/interviews seemed like cheap
shots or were fit to support his narrative. Instead of buying this book, listen to his podcast
with Ezra Klein and read The Givers.

19) Good and Mad – Rebecca Traister [non-fiction]

Definitely recommended – brings together history of women’s political action plus #MeToo
plus issues of race in women’s resistance movements. Traister has written some amazing
essays post-2016 and this book is well worth the read.

18) Everything Trump Touches Dies – Rick Wilson [non-fiction]

Political strategist who recently “crossed lines” working to elect Doug Jones in Alabama (he
was so disgusted that the GOP establishment would support Roy Moore), here Wilson runs
through why he wishes his Conservative brethren would stand up against Trump. Wilson
has a little bit of self-reflection on how he might have been part of a machine that led us
here, but the “joy” here in more hearing a non-DEM lash out against the actions and
1/4
complicity of the Republican politicians, enablers and media.

17) Gigged – The End of the Job and the Future of Work – Sarah Kessler [non-fiction]

Kessler does a good job here of finding some people impacted by the gig economy and
using their personal stories against the broader discussions of Uber, portable benefits and
the transforming economy. It could have just been a Silicon Valley story, but it’s actually
more of an American story. And one of our portfolio companies, ManagedByQ, gets lots of
pages, so bonus!

16) Frenemies – The Epic Disruption of the Ad Business (and Everything Else) – Ken
Auletta [non-fiction]

Ken Auletta is a wonderful reporter/writer – I’ll read anything he publishes. That said, mixed
feelings on this one. The books narrative is focused around a handful of industry titans who
are clearly smart and successful people, but perhaps not ones I could really feel connected
to. There’s also a handful of annoying issues that editing should have caught – such as the
same idiom/phrase used twice within two pages. I know, I’m OCD on stuff like that.

15) Yes We (Still) Can: Politics in the Age of Obama, Trump and Twitter – Dan Pfeiffer
[non-fiction]

Flashes back and forth between the situation we’re in today politically and Dan’s
experiences in politics, concluding with his senior roles on Team Obama. I lightly know Dan
– we met first when he was still working w Obama and more recently in his role as San
Francisco new dad/podcaster. The book is a relatively quick read and I’m sure for many,
the recollections of an Obama White House will product lots of feels.

14) Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup – John Carreyrou [non-fiction]

The Theranos story by the WSJ reporter who broke the fraud story wide open. I originally
wasn’t interested in reading this, thinking my time was better spent consuming books I
could learn from or which would inspire me, but it was an AMAZING read. Not just because
Carreyrou’s a fabulous storyteller but because it produced an unexpected emotion in me:
sadness. The Theranos lie was inspiring enough to pull together talented employees, the
best of whom either quit quickly once they began to suspect something was wrong, or who
were dumped by Holmes once they started to ask questions. But for anyone who has been
part of a startup success story, you’ll recognize how special the convergence of talent can
be. And what a waste of people’s time and talent. Carreyrou can’t answer the question of
whether Theranos switched from moonshot to fraud on Day 1 or Day 1000 – that’s only
known to its founder – but an unfortunately iconic book if you work in Silicon Valley.

13) The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America –
Richard Rothstein [non-fiction]

Wow, this was an important read. Rothstein basically shows that our country’s flawed and
discriminatory housing history wasn’t just de facto segregation but de jure – that is, not the
byproduct of private institutions and forces but law and policy decisions enforced by our
government. Thank you Catherine Bracy for the gift.

2/4
12) In The Shadows of Statues: A White Southerner Confronts History – New Orleans
Mayor Mitch Landrieu [non-fiction]

I’d heard Mayor Landrieu interviewed on a podcast and was impressed. This is a quick
read based around his successful campaign to remove a stature of Robert E Lee from New
Orleans. His second term of Mayor is coming to a close soon and this book is clearly part
of the launching pad for “what’s next” but it’s also worthwhile hearing his perspectives on
Katrina (and the recovery), the “Lost Cause” myth that hides racism and the complexity of
big city systems.

11) Runaways: Volume 1 – Brian K Vaughan [fiction]

Every once in a while I jump into a graphic novel as a visual break. This one deals with a
bunch of kids who discover their parents are supervillians. It’s ok.

10) Bad Stories: What The Hell Just Happened To Our Country – Steve Almond [non-
fiction]

All the feels. This book left me nodding my head but did little to mitigate my anxiety about
the combination of forces challenging our society today.

9) Better Off Without ‘Em: A Northern Manifesto for Southern Succession – Chuck
Thompson [non-fiction]

Yeah, uh, the title says it all. Part bomb-throwing humorist, part OpEd, part nutty screed.

8) Janesville, An American Story – Amy Goldstein [non-fiction]

Ethnographic study of a Wisconsin town in transition that makes you feel what “economic
insecurity” feels like outside of its too-broad application in the 2016 election punditry.
Beginning with the 2008 closing of an auto assembly plant that was already thousands of
jobs smaller than during America’s industrial peak, Janesville is a pop in the mouth and tug
on the heart. Here’s the NYTimes review from April 2017 .

7) Brotopia – Emily Chang [non-fiction]

A year after Susan Fowler’s blog post we’re now at the point where talented writers like
Emily can look at the “tech bro doing wrong” stories from a 10,000 ft level to help frame
why we got here and some advice for how we get to a better place. It’s easy to read a book
like this, encounter the most grievous examples of sexism, and shrug “that’s awful, but I’d
never do that.” It’s more difficult for even well-intended men to know there’s still something
(more likely *somethings*) we do that makes tech a less inviting place for women, and to
resolve to listen, ask, learn and evolve.

6) Red Sparrow – Jason Matthews [fiction]

A friend recommended this on Twitter and I saw it was soon to be a movie starring Jennifer
Lawrence, who I generally like. Unfortunately, I forget that I don’t really love spy novels and
the author used the word “sexpionage” non-ironically. So, yeah, maybe don’t read this one.

5) Against the Grain – James C Scott [non-fiction]


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So, that whole thing about humans moving from hunter/gather to fixed agrarian society,
and how it was awesome? Well James Scott has a bit of a contrarian viewpoint. He makes
the argument that populations weren’t necessarily healthier and better off for
domesticating themselves around crops. And that rather than these configurations giving
rise to the stability of nation-states, that it was kinda the other way around. That nation-
state needed agrarian populations to produce food for the kingdom, that this food could
only be effectively harvested through use of slaves or indentured classes and that grains
weren’t necessarily the *best* crops but rather than best crops for purposes of taxation.
Read this if you’re into societal development stuff.

4) Finding Flow – Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi [non-fiction]

You know when people talk about “being in the flow” – the stretches where you feel most
alive and creative? When time passes without being aware of it? When you’re locked-in on a
task that’s both hard and enjoyable? Mihaly is the grandfather of that concept. In Finding
Flow, written 20 years ago, he further explains the concept of flow but also how to more
regularly optimize for achieving flow in your everyday life. It’s ~150 pages (about 1/3rd of
which are skimmable).

3) A Uterus Is A Feature, Not A Bug – Sarah Lacy [non-fiction]

A “personal” one for me as we’ve known Sarah and her family for a quite a while, but really
bonded over becoming parents around the same time earlier this decade. Half-memoir,
half-reporting, this was one where I didn’t want to let the year end without reading given my
hope that 2017 was a turning point in how we think about gender in technology.

2) Lovecraft Country – Matt Ruff [fiction]

I read very little fiction but when I saw that Jordan Peele optioned this book to turn into a
HBO series….! Historical fiction + sci-fi + sociology of American racism I imagine this read
is a bit too “pulp and cult” for some but I really enjoyed it.

1) Reset – Ellen Pao [non-fiction]

Bought this one after reading a stunning excerpt in New York magazine. I’d met Ellen a few
times previously, but wasn’t until this past year that I’d say we became “friends” as we find
our daughters in the same school, and more reasons to collaborate given her return to
venture. Ellen used her voice to raise a bunch of systemic issues in our community and it’s
hard not to see a straight line between her lawsuit and the #MeToo movement of 2017.

4/4

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