Książka "Pycha absolutna. Elon Musk. Biografia" autorstwa Faiza Siddiquiego to dogłębna analiza fenomenu jednego z najbardziej wpływowych i jednocześnie kontrowersyjnych wizjonerów naszych czasów. To opowieść o człowieku, który przez lata przedstawiał się jako zbawca ludzkości, altruista pragnący powstrzymać zmiany klimatyczne i umożliwić kolonizację Marsa, by w końcu stać się postacią wzbudzającą skrajne emocje i nierzadko krytykę. Co naprawdę wydarzyło się z Elonem Muskiem na przestrzeni ostatniej dekady?
Ta biografia to fascynująca podróż w głąb umysłu i działań Elona Muska, która pozwala zrozumieć, jak z niekwestionowanego geniusza, współczesnego Edisona, przeobraził się w tak nieobliczalną osobowość medialną. To nie jest historia o nagłej utracie rozsądku czy zewnętrznych intrygach. Jak sugeruje sam autor, Elon Musk zniszczył swoją reputację i naraził swoje imperium, będąc po prostu sobą. Czy to właśnie ta autentyczność, połączona z niesamowitym zapałem do zmieniania świata, jest kluczem do jego sukcesów i jednocześnie źródłem jego problemów?
Faiz Siddiqui is a technology journalist who writes for the Washington Post and has covered companies such as Tesla, Uber and Twitter (now X) for the Business Desk. His reporting has focused on transportation, social media and government transformation, among other issues. His work has been recognized by the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing and he has earned multiple Society of Professional Journalists Mark of Excellence and Hearst Journalism awards. His writing has also appeared in the Boston Globe and NPR.
This work of business journalism is equal parts juicy and deeply researched, making it an absolute page-turner. It recounts Elon Musk’s business foibles at Tesla and Twitter/X. The scariest part for me was reading about how dangerous and frankly half-assed Tesla’s Autodrive system is, and how carelessly the company rolled updates out without sufficient testing. You’re not going to find many details of Musk’s complicated personal life in these pages, nor will you find the inside scoop on DOGE (due to the long lead time of trad publishing, this book was written before the Trump inauguration). But if you’re someone who’s fascinated by poor business decisions, this is a super interesting read!
"There is a large graveyard filled with my enemies." —Elon Musk. p8
Pre-Read notes
Yikes. Look at that opening quotation and tell me it doesn't make you feel something. For me, it instills wariness and distrust. Who talks about their enemies like this except for people who are completely preoccupied with their enemies? I refuse to play armchair psychologist here, but being obsessed with real or perceived enemies is disordered thinking.
I had to read this for the same reason I read about the current species die-offs, pollution, wars and conflict, climate change and natural disasters, and pretty much everything else we manage to politicize in the U.S.-- books are the only delivery systems of such misery that I can tolerate. So here we go. I'm about to read about the man who is dismantling this country's social services and already making it extremely hard for me to get treatment and medication. (I'm disabled, which is one of the most politicized existences one can possess.) I don't expect this to be a pleasant read. *edit It wasn't.
Final Review
I have long admired Faiz Siddiqui's journalism so I was really excited to read this one. Musk is an interesting figure still, despite being polarizing. I had requested the book before he started working in the government in January, so I now have little tolerance for this subject, due to the fact that he is impossible to escape.
After reading as much of this book as I have, I'm worried some 💩head will dox me. But I still want to share what I've gained from just the little bit that I read. For sure, Musk's thinking is completely disordered in so many of the stories included here. My guess? He needs some sleep. But until he gets some, his absurd wealth will protect him from ever having to act like he's not the only person living here.
So if I can leave you with anything, it's this: Elon Musk is tripping.
I recommend this book to fans or critics of Elon Musk, or fans or critics of long form journalism.
Review summary and recommendations
Reading Notes
Two things I loved:
1. The promise felt big: Tesla’s mission is “to accelerate the world’s transition to sustainable energy.” Wasn’t that more important than a few pesky societal norms? p11 No, it's not, because people who deride the rules don't recognize the importance of the public good. They are driven only by their own selfish whims. Speaking once about the nearly four-hundred-foot SpaceX rocket he hopes will take humans to Mars, he said: “I can’t say for sure that Starship will reach escape velocity, but my hubris certainly has.” p14 I mean here he expresses his lack of concern for astronauts' survival in service to his self-proclaimed hubris. This is one unpredictable dude.
2. I have liked Siddiqui's journalism for a long time, used to watch him on CNN. This book contains the professionalism I've come to expect from him. He has a lot of not nice things to say about his subject, but he isn't bashing or even insulting him.
Three quibbles:
1. By the time he was pulling public stunts like erecting a giant, pulsing X logo in the middle of San Francisco to signify Twitter’s rebrand— directing “rave levels of brightness,” as one person put it to me, into residential high-rises (including an apartment complex of senior and low-income residents and people with disabilities)—no one expected him to face any real consequences. p151 This is section is basically going to be a huge collection of evidence that Musk doesn't give a 💩 about anyone or anything.
2. Among Washington officials, Cummings’s story is a cautionary tale of what can happen when one dares to mention Tesla or Musk, whose legions of online fans are extremely sensitive to the slightest hint of criticism. Musk’s tweets to those groups serve to fan the flames, providing a set of marching orders . Today, so many with strong opinions on Musk refrain from expressing them outright for fear of disturbing the hornet’s nest and inviting an online swarm of vitriol turbocharged by Musk’s megaphone. p33 Elon Musk only cares about Elon Musk.
3. Tesla was effectively handcuffing its future to one man, turning a publicly traded company into an automotive fiefdom. p38 Elon Musk cares only about his own pocket.
Notes
1. Siddiqui was so brave to take on this project, honestly. I have the utmost respect for him.
Rating: 💰💰💰💰 /5 men above the law Recommend? yes, if you're more patient than I am Finished: May 3, '25 Format: accessible digital arc, Netgalley
Thank you to the author Faiz Siddiqui, publishers St. Martin's Press, and NetGalley for an advance digital copy of HUBRIS MAXIMUS. All views are mine. --------------
The timing of this release couldn't be better: over the past few months, seemingly everyone is trying to understand what happened to that brilliant genius, Elon Musk, who became famous for his sleek cars and bold dreams. If you haven't followed his path closely, this book will give you plenty of insight, recalling many horrible stories from his career and showing how he has always been the man so many people now hate. Since I am interested in technology, I know most of them and the narrative structure was a bit too chaotic for me, but if you want to learn everything about recent years of Musk’s doings from scratch, this will be a great choice.
Thanks to the publisher, St. Martin’s Press, and NetGalley for an advanced copy of this book.
Wow. This is a really important and timely deep-dive into the past 7 years of Musk’s roller coaster of a career. I highly recommend it, especially if you've been wondering if there's a method to all the madness.
From what I can tell there is no new reporting in this book which is a bummer. Given the title I expected some bombastic revelations but mostly it seems to exist solely for the author to reframe some well worn stories to fit his preferred narrative. Because of the short length, you’re expected to know relevant details that the author either glosses over or skips altogether.
It’s a disappointing effort with seemingly no reason to exist. It really adds nothing to the existing Musk corpus.
As a pretty avid nonfiction reader, and politically opinionated American, it’s my personal duty to read such examinations. Although the writing is mediocre and repetitive, it’s a decent companion to the Walter Isaacson biography, if you’re willing to dive fully in. Erratic, chaotic, narcissistic, and dangerously influential. I’m obvs no Musk fan.
A brilliant, limited focus biography about Elon Musk in the late 2010s and early 2020s. My only complaint is I wish there was a cradle-to-the-grave edition, perhaps a volume II is in order. In any case, the most important news book released this year, along with ORIGINAL SIN.
Nieoczekiwanie skończyłem czytanie w trakcie trzygodzinnego lotu. Nieoczekiwanie, ponieważ trzydzieści trzy procent ebooka to przypisy. Pomyślałem, że może to nie tylko obowiązkowa weryfikacja podawanych przez niego faktów, ale też zabezpieczenie na wypadek procesu. Elon Musk to mały i żałosny człowiek i pewnie byłby do tego zdolny. Cóż to dla niego.
Autor Muska nie oszczędza. I nie smęci o jego dzieciństwie i młodości. Nie jest nudno jak w cegle o Musku, którą napisał Walter Isaackson. Autor skupił się na samym mięsie. Choć książka nie obejmuje śmieszno strasznego epizodu jak działalność Muska w ramach DOGE u Matoła Trumpa. To chyba wtedy - taką mam nadzieję - do szerokiej opinii publicznej dotarło kim jest Elon Musk. I właśnie dlatego u mnie tylko cztery gwiazdki - bo nie dowiedziałem się niczego nowego. Od dekady, a na pewno od czasu kupna Twittera i zamienienia go w prawicowo pornograficzno hejterski ściek (którym pewnie był już wcześniej więc…) było dla mnie jasne, że to człowiek zaburzony, ogarnięty manią wielkości. Żaden wizjoner czy absolutysta wolności słowa, jak się lubił przedstawiać ku uciesze wpatrzonych w niego matołków. Kolejny kapłan technościemy i manipulacji.
Ale dobrze było sobie trochę tą wiedzę uporządkować i pogłębić. Niemniej, sensacji tu nie uświadczycie.
This is a very informative and relevant read! Siddiqui did an incredible job laying out Elon's rise and fall of fame, fumbles, controversies, and neurotic narcissism. There is a lot of information in this book but the explanations were always concise. Siddiqui has a wonderful literary voice, leaving the reader with a good balance of information mixed with humor. It's truly wild to see all of Elon's controversies laid out like this. This book is great for anyone looking to read over Elon's doings for the past 20 years.
As someone who has been very involved in the technology and environmental spaces, it's truly disheartening to see all of the lies we were fed under the guise of advancing tech. Like many, there was a time where I wanted to trust Elon's ideas. But it's obvious now that only a select type of person would benefit from his power.
At the end of the day, life is random. We can try to study and predict every outcome, automate the entire universe, but chaos will always exist. We cannot solve all dangers with machines. But, what else can we expect from someone who refuses to accept fundamental scientific understandings and genuinely thinks they can change the laws of the universe?
While I didn't love the writing itself (also not the author's fault, but I did not love the audiobook reader) the content is enlightening about the mental crumbling of a terminally online man with outsized power. More honest than Isaacson's starstruck rendering of Musk.
This book focuses on the time period where Elon Musk let his crazy out. Having started with an excellent reputation, somewhere around 2017, he started letting people see the person behind the image. It's really interesting, but the organization is hard to follow. It seems disjointed and jumping around when reading it. There are even passages that repeats the same information, so it seems like it was maybe put together from shorter writings or needs a different editor. Perhaps it is simply a symptom of the writer used to the shorter form of journalism. The information and sources are amazing and impeccable, but it was hard to keep interest in reading it.
Also, the book was finished at the end of 2024, in the middle of Musk becoming even more of an impact. I can only assume that the publisher wanted a book about him to sell during the top of interest in him, but it's the middle of the story. It feels like just the beginning of the story.
This is mainly about Musk's self-driving vehicles and acquistion of Twitter (now X). There is nothing about his personal life or controversial political involvement. No photographs, charts or media reproductions. It's a bit dull.
In Hubris Maximus, journalist Faiz Siddiqui unpacks Elon Musk's behavior as a business leader and person, illuminating persistant problematic patterns in his actions. While I appreciate the premise of this book and Siddiqui's journalistic rigor, I found the book to be lacking in the following ways: - Hubris Maximus only covers a brief portion of Elon Musk's life (mainly from the height of his power at Tesla to the 2024 Presidential election). I wish Siddiqui spent more time on his early days to understand if these patterns stretch back further - The book is circular, with the same events repeating in multiple chapters. I believe this book could have been better organized to improve readability and persuasion -In many ways, it felt like an extended long form article instead of a book which pushed the story/thesis further. I appreciate Siddiqui's note that many of his sources only felt comfortable speaking on background, but I did not find any of the evidence presented in the book to be "ground breaking" to my understanding of Elon Musk
Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for this advanced copy (ARC).
Full disclosure, I’m extremely biased because I despise Elon Musk. I enjoyed this book way too much because it documents all of Elon Musk’s screw ups and lies over the years. This is how every biography should be written about that guy because he’s not the genius people think he is, and the mask is slowly coming off.
As mentioned, the book is sort of a biography, but it goes through all of Elon’s controversies, and it was interesting learning about ones I was unaware of and details I didn’t know. It talks about the various Tesla crashes and how Elon’s just too rich to have any consequences, and then it goes into the purchase of Twitter. That’s kind of where it ends, so I’m sure there could be an entire other book written about how he became the head of DOGE and screwed up our country. And now that I think about it, it’s interesting because this book didn’t cover his crypto pumping at all.
Great book if you dislike Musk or if you love Musk and want to understand why people like me dislike him so much.
Too dry and boring for me 1📡 Siddiqui focuses on his businesses, SEC investigations, lawsuits etc - but I prefer books that give us the tea from one’s personal live: give me the excessive drug use that makes him piss himself, the baby mamas feuding on Twitter and all the weird freaky shit he did in front of Azealia Banks (allegedly).
An exhaustively researched collection of context behind the headlines from the last handful of years of Elon news. It wisely sticks to digging into the churn of Business Elon's questionable decisions instead of laying into the deep weirdness of Celebrity Elon (although I would have loved a chapter about his SNL episode). A great primer to the continued news stream of Musk-caused pitfalls both ongoing and sure to follow.
Excellent book from this young upstart!! can't wait to continue reading his reporting in the Post!
Author did a great job; well written and thorough. Hard to write something like this and go up against a giant. Also listened to Cultish’s episode on Musk right before this, and the combo was insightful: https://open.spotify.com/episode/5K3V...
I had a decent time reading this book but also found several aspects of it irritating/conflicting.
Pros: - shows how nuanced and not black/white Elon’s persona is - shows (or tries to) why Tesla is constantly fighting US regulatory organs - shows most major events through lens of different more or less famous people
Cons: - loose timeline structure - jumping between dates and events - making sensation of some known personality traits - (content that felt like) tabloid like journalism in some chapters
An interesting overview of Musk going from being hailed as the Technoking of Tesla to becoming somewhat of a lolcow. The book itself is very bare bones, throwing stats and numbers. While it manages to paint the picture that it wants, it was admittedly quite boring to read.
I was expecting a little more from this with a title like this. This looks into the madness that is the person of Elon Musk through some of his business practices. It gives specific examples of his disregard for safety or rules. It paints the path to why he became so involved in Trump’s bid for a second term, not to mention why he targeted the departments and workers he did. IT gets into how he weaponized Twitter with his fanboys. I was not a fan of the writing, probably because it was written by a journalist and thus very dry and matter of fact in presentation. Likewise, the author kept making sure to point out times Musk refused interviews and only made a comment about telling the author’s boss (Bezos) off/ accusing the reporter of just being to try and take him down because of the competitive nature of their space companies.
I was hoping for a look at Musk’s early life and rise to prominence, but there are only few brief references to those years. And I was confused by a reference to an early Musk who didn’t have two nickels because I thought his family was wealthy. There’s almost nothing about Space X or even his early years at Tesla. This book focuses primarily on Musk’s dealings with federal regulators and his Twitter purchase. It’s based heavily on court documents and doesn’t break any new ground, but it provides a deep dive on those two topics. If you’re hoping for some clue into the origins of his success, personality, or beliefs, you’ll be disappointed.
3.5 A snapshot-in-time book more like a longform journalism article than a book. If you’re looking for something about Musk’s rise, DOGE, or even his odd populating practice with multiple women, you’ll be disappointed. Instead this book basically covers a very small period of time, focusing primarily on the Tesla self-driving difficulties over the last 7 years or so and his purchase of Twitter. On the latter topic, Character Limit is a more comprehensive book, leaving a cursory treatment of Tesla during that brief period.
I’m somewhat new to politics, only getting involved since the last election cycle. I’ve seen plenty of Elon Musk on the news today, but not so much of his past. This was a very interesting read on his past business dealing with Tesla, and acquisition of Twitter. The author gives you a clear view of Musk’s modus operandi. If you are on the left, you will appreciate the book’s insights. If you are on the right, well, I doubt you will enjoy it.