The Sunday Times - UK (2021-11-28)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1

BUSINESS


An Ugly Truth Inside


Facebook’s Battle for


Domination by Sheera Frenkel


and Cecilia Kang


Bridge Street Press £20


There is no shortage of books


about Facebook, yet this


investigation by two New York


Times journalists is a welcome


addition. Impeccably


researched through interviews


with the company’s present


and former employees,


investors and even enemies,^


it examines how the social


network is used to spread


disinformation and its role


in the Cambridge Analytica


scandal and Donald Trump’s


2016 presidential victory.


Work Won’t Love You Back


by Sarah Jaffe


Hurst £20


Nothing in life is more


satisfying than quitting a job


that you loathe. Yet a strange
expectation has arisen in the
opposite direction: that you
should adore the nine-to-five.
This relationship is entirely
one-sided, as anyone who has
slogged tirelessly at work only
to get the boot can testify.
Jaffe’s timely and punchy
book explores how we’ve
been sold a dud dream: told
to find fulfilment and meaning
from work, while job security
evaporates and working
conditions deteriorate.

Witness Amazon donating to
black communities after the
death of George Floyd, while
firing staff who want better
working conditions. Even
those who don’t share
Ramaswamy’s conservative
views are likely to find his
arguments enticing.

Scary Smart The Future of
Artificial Intelligence and
How You Can Save Our World
by Mo Gawdat
Pan Macmillan £18.99

The world’s reigning
champion in chess is a
machine. By far the safest
drivers are computers. In
this easy-to-read if apocalyptic
book, Mo Gawdat, a former
chief business officer at
Google’s research lab, says
that is only the beginning;
by 2049 AI will be a billion
times cleverer than us. He
then explores how we can
be better “parents” to our
genius offspring.

Toxic A Guide to Rebuilding
Respect and Tolerance in a
Hostile Workplace
by Clive Lewis
Bloomsbury £20

Most of us have worked with a
“toxic colleague” — one who is

uncollegiate, unkind or
abusive. #MeToo exposed an
extreme form of workplace
abuse, but bullying and
favouritism are common too.
Clive Lewis, a business
psychologist, explores how to
handle and prevent toxicity to
stop employees voting with
their feet. This should be
required reading for company
bosses across the land. c

Bosses behaving badly


Woke, Inc Inside the Social
Justice Scam
by Vivek Ramaswamy
Swift Press £20

A successful entrepreneur,
Ramaswamy argues that big
business has appropriated
identity culture in a bid to
prove that it cares about
something other than profit.

Two faced An Ugly Truth
looks at Facebook’s dark side

Greed, corruption


and sharp practices


head up Rosamund


Urwin’s list


BOOKS OF THE YEAR


Empire
of Pain
The Secret
History of the
Sackler Family
by Patrick
Radden Keefe
Picador £20

The name “Sackler” used
to be associated with
philanthropy; now it
signifies the suffering of
opioid addicts. Keefe, a staff
writer for The New Yorker,
won the Baillie Gifford prize
for non-fiction for this
damning investigation into
the dynasty’s role in the
crisis, which is killing an
estimated 128 people a day
in the US. This is a morally
rigorous, pulsating story of
greed and corruption, and
the suffering they cause.

OUR BOOK


OF THE YEAR


TOM WILLIAMS/GETTY IMAGES

44 28 November 2021

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