Walter Isaacson shares new information on his best-selling biography of the Apple founder.
FORTUNE — Walter Isaacson’s Steve Jobs has topped The New York Times bestseller’s list for eight consecutive weeks now. Earlier in the month I interviewed Isaacson for a sold-out audience of the Commonwealth Club of Northern California in San Francisco. For all that has been written about Isaacson’s book and for all the people who have read it, there is plenty left to say.
Some highlights I haven’t seen explored elsewhere (other than coverage of the Dec. 14 event at the Intercontinental Mark Hopkins hotel):
* As a “backward-looking biographer,” Isaacson has made what appears to be a conscious decision not to judge Steve Jobs’s behavior. Isaacson did more than any other writer to document how Jobs treated other people. Yet he clearly states that Jobs’s accomplishments outshine his shortcomings. I predict this debate will pick up in intensity, especially as Jobs’s behavior comes to be equated with Apple’s (AAPL) behavior, and the business community dissects the company’s way of doing business as opposed to the man’s. (Shameless self-promotion, and thanks to Isaacson for repeatedly pointing this out: I will discuss this topic in my upcoming book,
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