The author, a
millennial who became a writer for The New Yorker on technology
topics, has written a sort of tell-all memoir about her experiences in her late
twenties, when she left the New York publishing scene to try to get ahead in
her career and her life by working in customer support for high-tech start-ups
in Silicon Valley.
Although she
doesn't name the several companies where she worked (choosing instead to use
descriptive words such as "the social media company" rather than
explicitly naming them, although it's not hard to guess), we get a full tour of
her experiences as a young woman from the East Coast in the Bay Area start-up and
venture capital tech scene.
She describes how
excited she was to be part of small teams doing big important new things, but
how she also felt discriminated against, both because she was female, and
because her educational background and interests were not in technology, but in
literature.
I found it an
insightful and touching personal account of a young millennial woman's
coming-of-age experience, with a nice amount of snark thrown in about the
precious world of the high-tech entrepreneurs and workers of her
generation.
It takes us back
to that time (not long ago) when the Great Recession had just happened, and
young tech entrepreneurs were busy selling venture capitalists and the public
on their dreams of vast wealth creation (mostly for themselves), and the
transformative social power of apps.
Recommended.