Paul Graham
A Life in Startups
Paul Graham defies easy categorization: computer scientist, philosopher, painter, entrepreneur, essayist, and investor. This book traces his path from childhood in England to becoming a central figure in Silicon Valley, showing how his mix of technical skill, artistic sensibility, and philosophical curiosity shaped his approach to startups, programming, and innovation. It follows his journey from studying philosophy at Cornell and Lisp at Harvard to writing influential books on programming languages and building Viaweb, one of the first web-based software businesses, which Yahoo! acquired for nearly $50 million.
After Viaweb, Graham became known for sharp, contrarian essays that helped define modern startup culture. His ideas—“Make Something People Want,” doing things that don’t scale, the Maker’s Schedule, the Hierarchy of Disagreement, and the Blub Paradox—gave founders and programmers a practical philosophy for creating useful, elegant work. Those essays and experiences led directly to Y Combinator, the accelerator he co-founded in 2005, which transformed early-stage investing by backing promising founders, encouraging rapid iteration, and building a powerful startup community that produced companies such as Reddit, Airbnb, Dropbox, and Stripe.
The book also explores Graham’s later work on Arc, Hacker News, and Bel, as well as his more reflective life in England with Jessica Livingston. Ultimately, it presents Graham as a builder and thinker who questions assumptions, values elegance, and seeks first principles. Readers come away with a deeper understanding of how unconventional combinations—philosophy and code, painting and startups, essays and investing—can lead to lasting influence in technology, business, and creative work.
This book is tailored for aspiring and early-stage startup founders, technology entrepreneurs, and individuals interested in the mechanics of building high-growth companies. It will also appeal to programmers and tech enthusiasts curious about Lisp, language design, and the hacker mindset, as well as readers seeking insights into the intersection of art, philosophy, and entrepreneurship. Anyone looking to understand the origins and impact of Y Combinator, or to gain practical wisdom from Graham's influential essays on startups and productivity, will find this book highly relevant.
May 27, 2026
English
44,534 words
3 hours 7 minutes
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