The first biography of Apple's Tim Cook is a comprehensive and highly detailed account of his career and how he shaped Apple after Steve Jobs's death, but treads well-traveled ground for a CEO who probably isn't even halfway through his tenure.
Leander Kahney's Tim Cook: The Genius Who Took Apple to the Next Level, is the first biography of Apple's CEO and follows Kahney's similar book about CDO Jony Ive. It's a comprehensive account of Cook's career and explores how a person so different to Steve Jobs successfully built on the Apple founder's legacy.
Both this and the previous Jony Ive: The Genius Behind Apple's Greatest Products do have the problem that their subjects did not talk to Kahney directly. Apple did not make Cook available for the current book, but the company gave its blessing by offering time and access to high-ranking executives. Those interviews were conducted at Apple Park.
The C-suite interviews include an extraordinarily rare one with Deirdre O'Brien, Apple's new head of retail. Only, neither she nor any other Apple people who spoke directly to Kahney offer very much beyond background color on Cook's ascendancy to CEO.
Instead, the majority of quotes and interviews in the book are from previously published accounts. Kahney acknowledges this and he's made a comprehensive bio using them, but it still means that points tend to be familiar. Since Cook says little publicly, compared to Steve Jobs for instance, there's a good chance that you already know most of the quotes from him.
One exception is in a long section about Apple's response to the FBI demanding a backdoor into iOS in response to the 2015 San Bernardino terrorist attack. We've seen how Apple reacted but Kahney brings us the inside story of what it was like and how the company worked to counter criticisms in a hugely contentious time.
However, while the full description of that San Bernardino incident is absorbing, we're introduced to it first with an aside that presumes we already know all about it. You can expect that someone who buys a Tim Cook biography is likely to, but such a person is also likely to know that iOS 7 controversially dropped skeuomorphism — and we're introduced to that three separate times.
Consequently, this feels less the compelling book that Kahney's Jony Ive bio was, and more a like series of magazine articles to be dipped into.
What it does best of all is manage to be praising of Cook without feeling sycophantic. There is a sense of a significant person being examined and Kahney is vastly more informed about Apple and technology than, say, Steve Jobs's biographer Walter Isaacsson was.
Consequently, unless Cook himself writes a book, it's unlikely that there will be another biography that is as comprehensive as this one. It's only a shame that whatever it was that made Kahney's bio of Jony Ive feel like an absorbing novel is missing here.
Tim Cook: The Genius Who Took Apple to the Next Level is published by Portfolio Penguin and can be preordered on Amazon for $27 in hardback.
Giveaway
Portfolio is generously offering 48 copies of Leander Kahney's Tim Cook: The Genius Who Took Apple to the Next Level to AppleInsider readers, who can sign up for the giveaway below. Entries will be accepted through April 19 and winners will be chosen at random and announced on April 20.
Entering the giveaway is quick and easy. Simply subscribe to our YouTube channel or download our app using the widget below. You can also gain additional entries by following us on Instagram to view exclusive photos from Apple events. The entry period for this giveaway ends at 11:59 p.m. Pacific on April 19, and the winners will be announced here on April 20. Definitely check back to see if you've won. No purchase is necessary to enter and the sweepstakes is open to U.S. residents aged 18 years and older. Please note, contest entries will be verified upon selecting the winners.
7 Comments
I like him. And will definitely get the audiobook next....on iTunes of course! Just don't like the 'good enough' lack of quality from Amazon, Google, etc. Basically all the rest out there. :)
"Sometimes, 'easy' is better than 'free!' Stevo Jobs, circa 2019 (I wish). :)
Best.
Odyssey II: from Compaq to Apple.
Um no. Just kidding.
That empire is now shaky at this next level. I wonder how Cook will deal with market saturation while lowering quality of Apple products as it stands (yes they are lower quality than 10 years ago).
Steve believed in giving regular people a chance to shine (examples Jony and Tim). Tim runs after successful people like a little girl at a Bieber concert.