

“Kidder’s portrayal of living with manic depression is as nuanced and intimate as a reader might ever expect to get. His is a seemingly artless art, like John McPhee’s, that conceals itself in sentences that are necessary, economical, and unpretentious.” ( The Boston Globe) “Kidder’s prose glides with a figure skater’s ease, but without the glam. A Truck Full of Money is a mesmerizing portrait of an irresistibly endearing man who is indefatigable, original, and as unpredictable as America itself. With the power of a consummate storyteller, Tracy Kidder casts a fresh, critical, and often humorous eye on the way new ideas and new money are reshaping our culture and the world. Yet when English did indeed make a fortune - when the travel website Kayak was sold for almost $2 billion - the first thing he thought about was how to give the money away: "What else would you do with it?" The second thing he thought was, "What's next?" Early on, one colleague observed, "Someday this boy's going to get hit by a truck full of money, and I'm going to be standing beside him". His innovative management style, success, and innate sense of fair play inspire intense loyalty. Relating to the Internet as if it were an extension of his own mind, he discovered that he had a talent for conceiving innovative enterprises and building teams that can develop them, becoming "a Pied Piper" of geeks. As a young man, despite suffering from what would eventually be diagnosed as bipolar disorder, he began his pilgrim's journey through the ups and downs in the brave new world of computers. Growing up in working-class Boston, English discovered a medium for his talents the first time he saw a computer.

Tracy Kidder, the "master of the nonfiction narrative" ( The Baltimore Sun) and author of the best-selling classic The Soul of a New Machine, now tells the story of Paul English, a kinetic and unconventional inventor and entrepreneur who as a boy rebelled against authority. “A perfectly executed, exquisitely reported parable of the Internet age and the wild, mad adventure that is start-up culture.” (Charles Duhigg)įortune, mania, genius, philanthropy - the best-selling author of Mountains Beyond Mountains gives us the inspiring story of Paul English, the founder of and Lola.
