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Uncanny Valley: A Memoir Hardcover – January 14, 2020
| Anna Wiener (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER. ONE OF THE NEW YORK TIMES'S 10 BEST BOOKS OF 2020.
Named one of the Best Books of 2020 by The Washington Post, The Atlantic, NPR, the Los Angeles Times, ELLE, Esquire, Parade, Teen Vogue, The Boston Globe, Forbes, The Times (UK), Fortune, Chicago Tribune, Glamour, The A.V. Club, Vox, Jezebel, Town & Country, OneZero, Apartment Therapy, Good Housekeeping, PopMatters, Electric Literature, Self, The Week (UK) and BookPage.A New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice and a January 2020 IndieNext Pick.
"A definitive document of a world in transition: I won't be alone in returning to it for clarity and consolation for many years to come." --Jia Tolentino, author of Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion
The prescient, page-turning account of a journey in Silicon Valley: a defining memoir of our digital age
In her mid-twenties, at the height of tech industry idealism, Anna Wiener―stuck, broke, and looking for meaning in her work, like any good millennial--left a job in book publishing for the promise of the new digital economy. She moved from New York to San Francisco, where she landed at a big-data startup in the heart of the Silicon Valley bubble: a world of surreal extravagance, dubious success, and fresh-faced entrepreneurs hell-bent on domination, glory, and, of course, progress.
Anna arrived amidst a massive cultural shift, as the tech industry rapidly transformed into a locus of wealth and power rivaling Wall Street. But amid the company ski vacations and in-office speakeasies, boyish camaraderie and ride-or-die corporate fealty, a new Silicon Valley began to emerge: one in far over its head, one that enriched itself at the expense of the idyllic future it claimed to be building.
Part coming-of-age-story, part portrait of an already-bygone era, Anna Wiener’s memoir is a rare first-person glimpse into high-flying, reckless startup culture at a time of unchecked ambition, unregulated surveillance, wild fortune, and accelerating political power. With wit, candor, and heart, Anna deftly charts the tech industry’s shift from self-appointed world savior to democracy-endangering liability, alongside a personal narrative of aspiration, ambivalence, and disillusionment.
Unsparing and incisive, Uncanny Valley is a cautionary tale, and a revelatory interrogation of a world reckoning with consequences its unwitting designers are only beginning to understand.
- Print length288 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherMCD
- Publication dateJanuary 14, 2020
- Dimensions5.64 x 1.01 x 8.59 inches
- ISBN-100374278016
- ISBN-13978-0374278014
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
Review
"Extraordinary . . . Wiener’s storytelling mode is keen and dry, her sentences spare―perfectly suited to let a steady thrum of dread emerge." --Jennifer Szalai, The New York Times
"[Wiener] is here to fill out our worst-case scenarios with shrewd insight and literary detail . . . Wiener is a droll yet gentle guide . . . The real strength of Uncanny Valley comes from her careful parsing of the complex motivations and implications that fortify this new surreality at every level, from the individual body to the body politic." --Lauren Oyler, The New York Times Book Review (cover review)
"Biting and funny . . . Uncanny Valley will speak to you as well as any book about millennial culture. Its humor is a proxy for the despair Wiener feels about tech culture’s predicament and her helplessness at doing anything about it . . .Uncanny Valley ought to be read by policymakers just as closely as any set of statistics." --Mark Athitakis, Los Angeles Times
"[Uncanny Valley] defamiliarize[s] us with the Internet as we now know it, reminding us of the human desires and ambitions that have shaped its evolution . . . Wiener’s book is studded with sharp assessments." --Sophia Nguyen, The Washington Post
"[Wiener] was seen as dispensable; her memoir is anything but. If Silicon Valley had seen her potential, she would not have become one of the finest, most assured writers about the internet today. I read it in one sitting, overcome with the eerie sensation that my own life was being explained to me." --Kaitlin Phillips, Bookforum
"[An] excellent memoir . . . what makes Uncanny Valley so valuable is the way it humanizes the tech industry without letting it off the hook. The book allows us to see the way that flawed technology is made and marketed." --Charlie Warzel, The New York Times Privacy Project
"Uncanny Valley is a different sort of Silicon Valley narrative, a literary-minded outsider’s insider account of an insulated world that isn’t as insular or distinctive as it and we assume . . . Through [Wiener's] story, we begin to perceive how much tech owes its power, and the problems that come with it, to contented ignorance." --Ismail Muhammad, The Atlantic
"Wiener has the two talents that every memoir needs: A devastating eye for detail . . . and the ability to map her experience onto a cultural shift much larger than herself . . . I deadened my phone and laptop while reading this so I could give it my Undivided Attention. I’m recommending not only the book but also this reading method." --Molly Young, Vulture
"Hyper-self-aware . . . Wiener’s book transcends the model of a tech-work memoir . . .Throughout the memoir, Wiener sustains a piercing tone of crisp, arch observation. It’s revelatory to see her navigate the subjects one generally reads about in newspaper headlines, about sexism at Google or the unregulated forums behind events such as Pizzagate." --Antonia Hitchens, San Francisco Chronicle
"Equal parts enchanting and subversive . . . [Wiener's] account of living inside the Bay Area bubble reads like HBO's Silicon Valley filtered through Renata Adler; Wiener is a trenchant cultural cartographer, mapping out a foggy world whose ruling class is fueled by empty scripts: 'People were saying nothing, and saying it all the tine.' The book's author does the very opposite." --Lauren Mechling, Vogue
"Beautifully observed . . . Someone like Wiener makes for a good spy in the house of tech . . . Wiener excels at . . . the texture of life for people in a particular and pivotal time and place." --Laura Miller, Slate
"An achingly relatable and sharply focused firsthand account . . .the literary texture of Wiener’s narrative makes it particularly valuable as a primary document of this moment. Her voice, alternating between cool and detached and impassioned and earnest, boasts an observational precision that is devastating. It is whip smart and searingly funny, too . . . a feat." --Kevin Lozano, The Nation
"[A] hyper-detailed, thoroughly engrossing memoir . . . At the intersection of exploitative labor, entitled men, and ungodly amounts of money, Wiener bears witness to the fearsome future as it unfolds." --Adrienne Westenfeld, Esquire
"Absorbing, unsettling, gimlet-eyed." --Laura Collins-Hughes, Boston Globe
"Incisive . . . inherently timely, [Uncanny Valley] aims for timelessness and achieves it. Its style is of a part with the dry, affectless writing of the period that Wiener seeks to capture but goes beyond the Sally Rooney-Tao Lin axis to deliver something sharper and more complete . . . I tore through Uncanny Valley, riveted by the wit and precision of Wiener’s observations." --Jennifer Schaffer, The Baffler
"The quality of Weiner’s on-the-ground observations, coupled with acuity she brings to understanding the psychology at work, makes the book illuminating on a page-by-page basis . . . [Wiener's] empathy makes the portrait all the more damning . . . Weiner’s book isn’t a warning so much as a lament over the damage done and the damage still to come." --John Warner, Chicago Tribune
"Wiener shines when she turns her incisive observations on the many entitled men running amok in Silicon Valley ... an engaging summary of every terrible thing you’ve heard about start-ups." --Ines Bellina, The A.V. Club
"Eschewing the caffeinated, self-referential keenness that defined the decade’s online writing, Wiener is cerebral and diagnostic in her observance of escalating corporate surveillance." --Pete Tosiello, The Paris Review
"A neat time lapse of the past seven years in Silicon Valley ... The author is a gifted writer and presents a clear-eyed account of her own limitations as a tech employee while offering cultural analysis of the sector . . . Uncanny Valley is an artful contribution to the war on tech exceptionalism." --Elaine Moore, Financial Times
"[Wiener] carefully, wryly observes everyday life in the Valley . . . a beautifully relatable and tender account." --Angela Saini, The Observer (London)
"A thought-provoking, personal, and often surprisingly poetic critique of the far-reaching influence of the tech world . . . Wiener’s narrative is by turns funny, informative, and a perfect time capsule of a rapidly changing city." --Royal Young, Interview
"Nothing short of crucial, a memoir that has crystalized the essential ingredients of what made the digital economy what it is." --Michael Seidlinger, GARAGE
"Weiner’s book feels destined to be a key and lasting portrait of a crucial moment in our relationship with tech culture: a perfect blend of humor, shrewd insight, and earnestness." --Stephen Sparks, Lit Hub
"Equal parts bildungsroman and insider report, this book reveals not just excesses of the tech-startup landscape, but also the Faustian bargains and hidden political agendas embedded in the so-called “inspiration culture” underlying a too-powerful industry. A funny, highly informative, and terrifying read." --Kirkus (starred review)
"[Wiener] is an extremely gifted writer and cultural critic. Uncanny Valley may be a defining memoir of the 2020s, and it’s one that will send a massive chill down your spine." --BookPage (starred review)
"[An] insider-y debut memoir that sharply critiques start-up culture and the tech industry . . . Wiener is an entertaining writer, and those interested in a behind-the-scenes look at life in Silicon Valley will want to take a look." --Publishers Weekly
"A compelling takedown of the pitfalls of start-up culture, from sexism to the lack of guardrails,Uncanny Valley highlights the maniacal optimism of the twentysomethings behind the screens and the pitfalls of the culture they are building.” --Booklist
"I've never read anything like Uncanny Valley, which is both a searching bird's-eye study of an industry and a generation, as well as an intimate, microscopic portrait of ambition and hope and dread. Anna Wiener writes about the promise and the decay of Silicon Valley with the impossibly pleasurable combination of a precise, razored intellect and a soft, incandescent heart. Her memoir is diagnostic and exhilarating, a definitive document of a world in transition: I won't be alone in returning to it for clarity and consolation for many years to come." ―Jia Tolentino, author of Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion
"Uncanny Valley is a generation-defining account of the amoral late-capitalist tech landscape we are fatally enmeshed in. With grace and humor, Anna Wiener shows us the misogyny, avarice, and optimistic self-delusion of our cultural moment, wrapped up in the gripping story of a young woman navigating the blurred boundaries of a seductive world. Insightful, compelling and urgent." ―Stephanie Danler, author of Sweetbitter: A Novel
"Like Joan Didion at a startup."―Rebecca Solnit, author of Call Them By Their True Names
“A rare mix of acute, funny, up-to-the-minute social observation, dead-serious contemplation of the tech industry’s annexation of our lives, and a sincere first-person search for meaningful work and connection. How does an unworn pair of plain sneakers ‘become a monument to the end of sensuousness’? Read on.”―William Finnegan, author of Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life
"Uncanny Valley is an addictive combination of coming-of-age story, journalistic memoir, and brilliant social critique. This is a stunningly good book. I loved it.” ―Dani Shapiro, author of Inheritance: A Memoir of Genealogy, Paternity, and Love
"Uncanny Valley is a sentimental education for our accelerated times, a memoir so good it will make you slow down. Is it too much to say that every sculpted page will be studied by future generations? (No.) Anna Wiener is the Joan Didion of start-up culture and then some." ―Ed Park, author of Personal Days
"Alternately outrageous and outraging. What makes Uncanny Valley unforgettable is not just Wiener's unique take on tech, but the fun of being along on the journey with her. Her immense intelligence and facility with language make the pages fly." --Katie Weed, Shelf Awareness
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : MCD (January 14, 2020)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 288 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0374278016
- ISBN-13 : 978-0374278014
- Item Weight : 14.1 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.64 x 1.01 x 8.59 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #112,617 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #11 in Computer & Technology Biographies
- #93 in Computers & Technology Industry
- #188 in Scientist Biographies
- Customer Reviews:
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A Silicon Valley memoir without a score to settle
In fact, there are precious few proper nouns anywhere in Uncanny Valley. There are no brand names, and not a single company is identified by name. Oh, they’re easy to figure out:
** “The social network everyone hated” (Facebook)
** “An on-demand ride-sharing startup” (Uber)
** “A computer-animation studio famous for its high-end children’s entertainment” (Pixar)
** “The search-engine giant” (Google)
** “The home-sharing platform” (Airbnb)
** “A renowned private university in Palo Alto that was largely considered a feeder for the tech industry” (Stanford)
** “The highly litigious Seattle-based software conglomerate” (Microsoft)
These are perfectly obvious to anyone with even passing familiarity with the tech industry, and no doubt Wiener meant it that way. But the device does help to create a sense of distance between us as readers and the companies. However, by contrast, I was able to figure out the name of only one of the three companies where she worked: Github (which Microsoft purchased in 2018 for $7.5 billion).
A Silicon Valley memoir that’s sometimes funny and always insightful
Wiener’s pithy observations about the tech industry are sometimes funny and always insightful. At “a monthly salon for the data curious” sponsored by one of her employers,” she witnessed “a fireside chat between two venture capitalists. . . It was like watching two ATMs in conversation.” And she describes one of the companies where she worked as “a company of twentysomethings run by twentysomethings. The CEO had never had a full-time job; he had only ever held a summer internship.” Wiener devotes considerable space to describing such experiences. But, naturally, she pays special attention to the under-appreciated role of women in the industry. For example, “The CEO and solutions manager agreed we needed more women on Support [where Wiener worked], but they didn’t hire any.”
“Immersion therapy for internalized misogyny”
The experience of working in such a testosterone-driven environment took a toll on her and the few other women at her company. “Being the only woman on a nontechnical team, providing customer support to software developers, was like immersion therapy for internalized misogyny. I liked men — I had a brother. I had a boyfriend. But men were everywhere: the customers, my teammates, my boss, his boss. I was always fixing things for them, tiptoeing around their vanities, cheering them up.”
On a personal note
I have rarely felt so old as when I read in Uncanny Valley. Of course, I have grandchildren older than the author, so I guess I shouldn’t be surprised. But the music, the food, the drugs, the clothing, and the personal habits Wiener describes in writing about her own life and that of her Silicon Valley colleagues strike me as utterly . . . well, alien. In the end, I found myself thinking of this memoir as an exercise in anthropology, exploring the little-understood culture of the tech world and of a new generation I can only dimly comprehend.
About the author
I found myself wondering how any Silicon Valley tech work could write so well. After all, aren’t they all supposed to be math geeks? Then I checked out Anna Wiener, only to discover that she’s a contributing writer at The New Yorker, which is sometimes considered to publish the best-written articles and stories in America. (So it seems to me, at least.) However, it’s clear from context that Wiener is no typical liberal arts grad miscast as a tech worker. She admits to an affinity for math and is a graduate of a math-and-science magnet high school in Manhattan. She is obviously ferociously bright: as she notes, she was hired by one company because they mysteriously asked her during her initial interview to take the LSAT, and she got a perfect score. A New York native, Wiener now lives in San Francisco and writes about startup culture and technology.
She works there for half a decade, cycling between several tech start-ups and more established technology companies. Anna doesn't have technical skills; she isn't a programmer or a data scientist or a security guru. She works in customer service, fielding calls for help, tracking down copyright infringements and checking company content boards for offensive and illegal content. She is incredibly well paid compared to her NYC days and the culture is very different. Employee structures are flat and perks abound. Remote work is allowed and encouraged.
But there are drawbacks as well. A higher salary doesn't mean much when all the technology money has made the real estate market so expensive that it is the rare person who doesn't have to have roommates well past the age that most people are on their own. Perks don't mean much in work weeks that routinely are expected to be eighty to a hundred hours weekly. Women are marginalized as are the non-tech employees. The buzz word for compensation is meritocracy but it's strange how the merit all seems to reside in young, white males who look just like the founders of these young companies.
Uncanny Valley is a term used in the technology industry. It refers to the fact that individuals respond more favorably to robots that appear human, but if the robot gets too human appearing, a revulsion sets in. It is a metaphor for the technology industry that appears fascinating and desirable from the outside but is anxiety producing and barren from an insiders' view. It is the casual data driven environment where every purchase and opinion is tracked and sold to companies so that they can better target their products and influence society. It is a cautionary tale that only an insider can tell. This book is recommended for readers of nonfiction and especially for those considering a career in technology.
Top reviews from other countries
A non-tech person looking at the San Francisco startup world from the inside, someone who is articulate and not blinded by that world.
And for some reason it reads like the chronicle of a bad breakup with a toxic partner, one of those where even after years you still cannot stop talking about them.
There's a hint of relief at no longer being there and at the same time regret because you did not become a millionaire.
Not what I wanted to read, a bitter disappointment
One assumes the work is partly autobiographical and is an individual’s view of current West Coast culture. As a child of the 60’s I see parallels with the prevailing ethos of that time. However, the backdrop of American dysfunctional politics will be the wild card in this tale.
Worth a read to calibrate your attitude to the digital technology revolution.









