Googled
The End of the World as We Know It
- Published: 7 January 2021
- ISBN: 9780753546888
- Imprint: Virgin Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 432
Googled functions as a fine primer for anyone looking to get to a grip on the company's history and its repercussions on the current media landscape
Los Angeles Times
A sharp and probing analysis of the apocalyptic upheavels in the media and entertainment industries
Publishers Weekly
A telling portrait of a paradigm-altering company, which in 11 years has utterly transformed the business and media landscape
Michiko Kakutani, New York Times
Absorbing
Scotsman
At last, a book about Google that does not require readers to get in touch with their inner geek. The most important company of the internet era, and the most controversial new media company for a generation has deserved a more accessible account for the general reader. In the hands of Ken Auletta, media writer for The New Yorker magazine, it gets one.
Financial Times
Compelling
The Economist
I cannot wait to read Ken's book. He is a rare business journalist and author who manages to combine extraordinary access to the kings and queens of industry without ever compromising his editorial integrity. If anyone can shed light on the Google monster, it is Ken.
Michael Grade
Ken Auletta has produced the seminal book about media in the digital age. It is a triumph of reporting and analysis, filled with revealing scenes, fascinating tales, and candid interviews. Google is both a driver and a symbol of a glorious disruption in the media world, and Auletta chronicles, in a balanced and thoughtful way, both that glory and that disruption.
Walter Isaacson, former managing editor of TIME, President and CEO of the Aspen Institute, and author
Ken Auletta, one of America's best business journalists, has turned his attention on the firm, with particular reference to the challenges it faces ... superbly reported
John Lanchester, Observer
No other reporter has covered the new communications revolution as thoroughly as has Auletta.
Columbia Journalism Review
Richly reported ... Auletta has provided the fullest account yet of the rise of one of the most profitable, most powerful and oddest businesses the world has ever seen
San Francisco Chronicle
The story he is telling, and its ramifications, is a narrative which is shaping the era in which we live, and at a frightening pace
Telegraph
This insightful book reinforces the need for old media ... brilliant
The Times