Uncanny Valley Audiobook By Anna Wiener cover art

Uncanny Valley

A Memoir

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Uncanny Valley

By: Anna Wiener
Narrated by: Suehyla El-Attar
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About this listen

A New York Times Best Seller

"Narrator Suehyla El-Attar has a strong voice for this memoir of a woman's journey into the mostly male world of tech start-ups in Silicon Valley. She is energetic, funny, and swift while telling the story of Anna Wiener's acculturation from book publishing in Manhattan to the dot-com boom in San Francisco." (AudioFile Magazine)

A New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice and a January 2020 IndieNext Pick. An Amazon Best Book of January. One of Vogue's 22 Books to Read this Winter, The Washington Post's 10 Books to Read in January, Elle's 12 Best Books to Read in 2020, The New York Times' 12 Books to Read in January, Esquire's 15 Best Winter Books, Paste's 10 Most Anticipated Nonfiction Books of 2020, and Entertainment Weekly's 50 Most Anticipated Books of 2020.

"A definitive document of a world in transition: I won't be alone in returning to Uncanny Valley for clarity and consolation for many years to come." (Jia Tolentino, author of Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion)

The prescient account of a journey in Silicon Valley: A defining memoir of our digital age.

In her mid-20s, 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-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.

A Macmillan Audio production from MCD

©2020 Anna Wiener (P)2020 Macmillan Audio
History & Culture Professionals & Academics Science & Technology Technology & Society Silicon Valley Business New York Inspiring Thought-Provoking Witty Funny

Critic reviews

New York Times Book Review Notable Books of the Year, 2020

Chicago Tribune Best Books of the Year, 2020

Los Angeles Times Holiday Books Guide, 2020

Esquire Magazine Best Books of the Year, 2020

Amazon.com Best Books of the Year, 2020

Vogue Magazine Best Books of the Year, 2020

"Narrator Suehyla El-Attar has a strong voice for this memoir of a woman's journey into the mostly male world of tech start-ups in Silicon Valley. She is energetic, funny, and swift while telling the story of Anna Wiener's acculturation from book publishing in Manhattan to the dot-com boom in San Francisco.... El-Attar's easy narrative style keeps us listening." (AudioFile Magazine)

What listeners say about Uncanny Valley

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Paradigm Enriched

Born in 1947, TV didn’t arrive in my little valley until I was 9. Rotary wall, party line phones, inter... what? But I now have a fancy phone that I can ask questions and get lucid answers, WiFi runs my home and Entertainments. Anna, bless you for filling in much for me; a paradigm changer for sure. Thank you for your crisp, clear, vocabulary challenging, witty writing. Well done!

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Wonderful narration

Great book and content - really thought provoking and the narrator (Suehyla) did a fantastic job to bring the book to life

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Extremely well-written, unabashed narrative which induces thought provoking insight

Defiantly original. Anna takes on an outsider’s “insider” view on what it’s like working in Silicon Valley’s hottest start-ups and living inside one of the most esteemed “ecosystems” of our times.
I also really enjoyed the thought-provoking questions about the role of technology in society and what influences millennial desire among others, that she poses through satirical prose.

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Wonderful insight lovely writing

Some pearls in this book, especially in the beginning. The “bingo” episode is priceless. Wonderful view into Silicon Valley from a woman’s perspective and from the perspective of someone who hasn’t drunk the kool aid. In the end, a reminder of the value of three dimensions.

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It's a Memoir, Not a Diatribe

This is a beautiful, beautiful book. I enjoyed it so much. Anna Wiener writes of her own life, and how curiosity took her from a role as personal assistant in the New York's publishing industry to the center of Silicon Valley life. She writes so personally, exposing all her own naïveté and fumbly social skills without holding anything back.

Perhaps, judging by the title, I had expected this to be a breathless exposé of the wrongdoings of the tech industry. Certainly, we've seen lots of those. But this book isn't that. It's just a memoir, and, because of that, it is so much more enlightening than a book that has a point to hammer home. I had also thought that it might be about how artificial intelligence and robotics can unnerve people when it gets to be too similar to how humans look and act (known as the "uncanny valley") but it has nothing to do with that either.

Instead, it is a well-written story of a woman who comes to the Silicon Valley boys' club looking for work, finds it, performs it well and wonders, the whole time, what is really going on in this strange place. The tech industry's infamous misogyny is on display, to be sure, but only because Anna experiences it firsthand and is affected by it, as are the women around her. But I like that the book never devolves into a diatribe, partly because the author herself holds her own point of view so gingerly, always willing to question it and change her mind. The vignettes of her dating life or the struggle to find affordable living in San Francisco just make the story more charming, and do not detract from the study of one of the most important industries of the past fifty years. If anything, they reinforce it.

I have worked in the tech industry for almost forty years, part of that in the Valley, and I found myself going through a similar transformation to what Anna experienced. But it was still a new experience for me reading this book (listening to it), because she is so much more contemplative, introspective and questioning than I'll ever be. And that makes for a great book. Are the giants of Silicon Valley a) heroes who are delivering a new economy and lifestyle for us all, or b) are they nothing more than the latest version of robber barons, or c) are they just a bunch of self-important goofballs clowning around and lucking into money while they build stuff that is largely useless and won't have any kind of lasting importance? Anna Wiener thinks to ask these questions. And I'm really glad she does.

Also - kudos to Suehyla El-Attar for the narration. She brings this important, personal story to life in every line. I actually wrote her name down in case I need someone to narrate my next audiobook. She's really good.

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excellent tale

Provocative and insightful. a tale about power, money, idealism, and the seduction of a generation. About wanting to belong and the price of the tech world on its employees.

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Prose is solid; author is a jerk

So tiresome and yet so well written. The author would be charming if not so insufferably critical and self-indulgently lacking in agency.

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a worm's-eye account of the latest tech bubble

Anytime unlimited amounts of money start flowing interesting stories will follow. Anna Wiener had an insider's vantage on the tech bubble of the mid-teens but as someone from a publishing and liberal arts, instead of a coding and business, background, brought an outsider's objectivity to this money orgy. Wiener is an excellent writer who has a lovely way with the last word in a sentence--using it to modify her observations with well-timed irony but never predictably nor with a heavy hand. I'm less enamored with what she hopes are fresh observations about the excesses and blind spots of the tech world: that it's a boys' club, that it enables workplace harassment, that all the money has made San Francisco less livable. Nothing fresh here you couldn't get with equal humor on HBO's Silicon Valley. Thus, the memoir serves more to chart a naive young woman's gradual awakening to this unusual world than to expose what we already knew was happening there.

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Truely an insider-outsider perspective of tech

Enjoyed the book. Some reviews said it was nothing new and it isn't. What's new for me though is to hear all that from a true insider-outsider perspective.

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Learn about Tech

You may be computer knowledgeable, but know little about the internal functionality of companies providing products or support in the tech industry. Ann Wiener teaches us about them as she describes her life working within a start-up. Her reporting enlightens with attention paid to interpersonal relationships and how progress is made towards the sought-for monetary reward at tunnel's end. I could not understand all the nuances but came away with a correct view of what's is and what is not there. One example: there are not enough women in positions of top leadership. 95% of these new start-ups fail with considerable losses of productive employment for many. Read with competence and clarity by the narrator. I found the industry to be scattered and abstract, a challenging painting to view and to like. Ms. Wiener's appraisal allows one inside an often-hidden key place in today's tech life.

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