Review:
"Drawing extensively on oral histories, Hughes reveals the day-to-day hands-on roles of both the venture capitalists and the scientists, their eyes fixed at once on scientific triumphs and corporate riches, who brought Genentech to life. Hughes vividly recounts the tough-minded deals, buccaneering strategies, laboratory struggles, and relentless patent arrangements that not only made for Genentech's success but that pioneered the new biotechnology industry's operational model."--Daniel Kevles, Yale University
"Sally Smith Hughes's book on the formative years of Genentech helps fill a gaping hole in the history of biotechnology, as it grew out of the recombinant DNA technology in the 1970s and 1980s. This book covers the quake from its epicenter. It draws on two decades of research, thousands of conversations, hundreds of documents, and dozens of oral history interviews. This zippy read will be welcomed by those who care about the San Francisco Bay area, biotechnology, the history of molecular biology, and high-tech economic development. Genentech has long had its legends, statues, buildings, and view of Candlestick Park; now it has a book about its beginnings."--Robert Cook-Deegan, Duke University
"[A]n important addition to the history of biotech."--Phillip A. Sharp, Massachusetts Institute of Technology "Nature Medicine "
"My first job out of my postdoc was at Genentech in early 1981. At the time, I had no idea that all those guys in suits were doing something that had never been done before. But I did know the science was amazing--and Bob Swanson was the clear leader in creating an environment that supported that science. Sally Smith Hughes has brought to life the details of what the key players were up to--they weren't playing it safe, and they created a catalytic environment that generated a whole new industry."--Cynthia Robbins-Roth, author of From Alchemy to IPO
"Hughes has crafted an engaging historical account of Genentech from its beginnings as a small laboratory at the University of California, San Francisco to the 2009 merger with Roche for 47 billion dollars. . . . [Her] account will appeal to a broad audience and is a must read for scholars interested in the history of biotechnology. Highly recommended."--J. A. Hewlett "Choice "
"The author skillfully reveals the practical, day-to-day, hands-on roles played by venture capitalists focused on fiscal gain and scientists focused on scientific breakthroughs. . . . [A] fascinating read."--Valerie McGurk "Nursing Standard "
""Genentech: The Beginnings of Biotech" paints a wonderfully detailed picture of an important beginning in the history of biotechnology."--Nathan Crowe, Arizona State University "Journal of the History of Biology "
"Hughes's "Genentech" makes an invaluable international contribution to understanding how a period just short of a decade redefined 'business as usual' for biologists."--Lisa Onaga, Nanyang Technological University "Technology and Culture "
"Sally Smith Hughes skillfully describes the improbable creation, difficult adolescence, immense prosperity, and eventual foundering of Genentech, the first biotech behemoth. It's a great tale, with a cast of fabulous characters and surprising episodes, ranging from Palo Alto to Wall Street. This is an outstanding book that should appeal to Nobel laureates as well as hedge-fund barons and ordinary citizens."
--Daniel S. Greenberg, author of Science for Sale and Tech Transfer
Hughes has crafted an engaging historical account of Genentech from its beginnings as a small laboratory at the University of California, San Francisco to the 2009 merger with Roche for 47 billion dollars. . . . [Her] account will appeal to a broad audience and is a must read for scholars interested in the history of biotechnology. Highly recommended. --J. A. Hewlett "Choice ""
About the Author:
Sally Smith Hughes is a historian of science at the Bancroft Library at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of The Virus: A History of the Concept and the creator of an extensive collection of in-depth oral histories on bioscience, biomedicine, and biotechnology.
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