
Apple is throwing itself behind the latest biography to tell the life of late co-founder Steve Jobs, ahead of its release on Tuesday. âBecoming Steve Jobsâ by Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli has elicited a response from Appleâs often-quiet press team, as to why it chose to provide interview access for the completion of the book.
âAfter a long period of reflection following Steveâs death, we felt a sense of responsibility to say more about the Steve we knew,â Steve Dowling, an Apple spokesman, told [1] the New York Times. âWe decided to participate in Brent and Rickâs book because of Brentâs long relationship with Steve, which gave him a unique perspective on Steveâs life. The book captures Steve better than anything else weâve seen, and we are happy we decided to participate.â
This is obviously a dig at Walter Isaacsonâs official biography on Jobs that was released shortly after his death in 2011. Tim Cook, Jobsâ successor as CEO at Apple, said last week that Isaacsonâs best seller did a âtremendous disserviceâ to the Apple founder.
âIt didnât capture the person,â Cook said. âThe person I read about there is somebody I would never have wanted to work with over all this time.â
Apple software boss Eddy Cue also hopped on Twitter with praise of âBecoming Steve Jobsâ, saying: âBest portrayal is about to be released â" Becoming Steve Jobs (book). Well done and first to get it right.â Appleâs iBooks account also tweeted [2] last week that ââBecoming Steve Jobsâ is the only book about Steve recommended by the people who knew him best.â
Already several juicy excerpts and whole passages have been posted online.
Schlender and Tetzeli told the New York Times that getting Appleâs cooperation wasnât easy. When first approached about the book in 2012, Apple told the writers that executives would not give any interviews. Apple changed its mind 18 months later, they said.
âBecoming Steve Jobs: The Evolution of a Reckless Upstart Into a Revolutionary Leaderâ will be available on Tuesday. Apple offered  a sample of the book. In addition to a banner on the iBooks Storeâs rotating carousel, Apple is heavily promoting the free sample through iTunes marketing emails as well.
Published by The Crown Publishing Group and written by veteran Wall Street Journal and Fortune reporter Brent Schlender and Rick Tetzeli, Executive Editor with Fast Company, the 464-page read âfelt a responsibility to say more.â
You can pre-order yours  via Appleâs iBooks Store [3]  and on Amazonâs Kindle Store [4]  for $15 a pop. The hardcover edition from Crown Business is available on Amazon for $21.78 [5] (regularly $30).
Source: New York Times [6] via MacRumors [7]
Links
- ^ told (www.nytimes.com)
- ^ tweeted (twitter.com)
- ^ iBooks Store (itunes.apple.com)
- ^ Amazonâs Kindle Store (www.amazon.com)
- ^ is available on Amazon for $21.78Â (www.amazon.com)
- ^ New York Times (www.nytimes.com)
- ^ MacRumors (www.macrumors.com)
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