What a fun book this was to read. David Kaplan's writing is suberb; witty, sometimes sentimental, and observant. "The Silicon Boys" chronicles the life of Silicon Valley, and the people who are building and built it up. By making the book part history of companies, and part biography of people, the reader becomes very well acquainted with the eccentricities, monumental successess and failures of this well-known region of the world.
Kaplan describes the Valley, from the original Gold Rush days of the 49ers to the modern Gold Diggers of the Internet Revolution, and the duality that springs forth from here. The dualities of companies are examined much as the duality of the history of the region, such as the extroverted Steve Jobs of Apple, and his co-founder, the introverted Steve Wozniak. There's the obnoxious Larry Ellison of Oracle, and the down-to-earth Bob Metcalfe of 3Com. Of course, Netscape and Microsoft (Internet Explorer) get some print-time too.
Sure, any writer can detail the life of Silicon Valley, but Kaplan himself makes the difference between this book and any other on the subject. It's not dry and completely objective; there's contempt for Ellison of Oracle, and there's a great little story about how the author could've been worth hundreds of millions of dollars today if he just accepted an offer to work for a certain Web-site back in 1995.
Definitely a fun, interesting and worthwhile book to read on the subject and history of Silicon Valley.