How to Rule the World, Theo Baker
How to Rule the World, Theo Baker
5 Rating(s)
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How to Rule the World
An Education in Power at Stanford University

Bestseller

Author: Theo Baker

Narrator: Theo Baker

Unabridged: 11 hr 31 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Penguin Audio

Published: 05/19/2026


Synopsis

"A rigorous, self-assured, propulsive, at times terrifying portrait of a dweebocracy that ‘sets the agenda for the planet’ . . . in the tradition of Michael Lewis’s Wall Street chronicle Liar’s Poker.” —The New York Times

"If Baker’s portrait of Stanford could be its own movie (The Internship crossed with The Skulls), his gripping account of how a tip turned into a history-making investigation has the makings of All the President’s Men." —The San Francisco Chronicle

“Poignant, maddening, and genuinely hilarious, How to Rule the World is to be devoured—and fast, before Stanford buys up and sets fire to every copy. (Talk about a burn book!)” —Mark Leibovich

From Theo Baker, winner of the George Polk Award for his investigation that brought down Stanford's president, comes a revelatory and gripping account of Silicon Valley hubris.

Slush funds. Shell companies. Yacht parties. This is life for Silicon Valley’s favored teenagers.

Seventeen-year-old Theo Baker showed up for freshman year at Stanford University as a tech-obsessed coder. It seemed like paradise. There were Rodin sculptures next to nuclear laboratories and inventors lounging with Olympians. But Baker soon discovered a culture that embraced corner-cutting, that vested infinite excess and access in the hands of kids with few safeguards to catch bad behavior.

Stanford, he realized, was less a school than a business. Its annual budget was nearly twice that of Harvard or Yale and higher than those of 116 countries. The product? Students. Especially those special few identified as the next trillion-dollar startup founders. For them, there were secret societies, “pre-idea” funding offers, and social calls from billionaires, all with the expectation that these geniuses would soon join the ruling elite.

At the helm of this business was Marc Tessier-Lavigne, a superstar neuroscientist and wealthy biotech executive. But when Baker joined the student newspaper and started poking around the Stanford president’s record, he discovered never-reported allegations of research misconduct in studies published across two decades bearing Tessier-Lavigne's name.

Only one month into college and thousands of miles from home, Baker began receiving anonymous letters, going on stakeouts, and tracking down confidential sources. High-powered lawyers and public relations teams were hired to attack his reporting. Stanford opened an investigation into its own leader. And by the end of the year, Tessier-Lavigne was out as president.

This is the incredible journey of a reluctant teenage reporter who uncovered a story that shook the scientific world and became front-page news across the country. It is also an unprecedented inside view of the students learning to rule the world—and what they’re learning from those who already do.

How to Rule the World is a shocking, hilarious, and moving debut, showcasing Silicon Valley’s training ground as never before.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Tanya on May 21, 2026

When reading a non fiction book, there are three things I look for: a subject that I know little or nothing about, a narrative structure that keeps me immersed in a new world, and excellent writing that includes an erudite vocabulary. How to Rule the World hits the trifecta. This book covers many top......more

Goodreads review by Zak on May 23, 2026

This is quite the book. I read it in two days. To be fair, I love investigative journalism stories, and this one was particularly of interest to me because it is couched in higher education. However, the most interesting part of this story is that institutions have a vested interest in protecting th......more

Goodreads review by Jessica on May 24, 2026

Jensen Huang went to my high school and many of my peers attended Stanford from our public high school in Silicon Forest (a/k/a Beaverton, Oregon home to Nike and intel). Of course back then the acceptance rate was 30% and middle class kids actually could get in. The author is a nepo baby but the bo......more

Goodreads review by Demetri on April 28, 2026

The Seductions of Being Recognized Too Soon Theo Baker’s “How to Rule the World” is a funny, uneasy, and revealing portrait of Stanford’s training in access before accountability By Demetris Papadimitropoulos. April 28th, 2026 “How to Rule the World” is most alarming in its quietest register, when it s......more

Goodreads review by Nicholas on May 24, 2026

I was really curious to read this book about Stanford, particularly given the Theo's unique experiences at the school. Some brief reflections on three topics the book touches on. THE STANFORD EXPERIENCE: The first third of the book I thought gave a good presentation of some of the more unique aspects......more


Quotes

“A rigorous, self-assured, propulsive, at times terrifying portrait of a dweebocracy that ‘sets the agenda for the planet.’ In every age, there is some place that epitomizes how power works. Baker’s Stanford is a strong candidate, and his book follows in the tradition of Michael Lewis’s Wall Street chronicle Liar’s Poker. . . In coming of age as a young man, he travels to the heart of a dehumanizing age.” —Anand Giridharadas, The New York Times

“What a journalist. If Baker’s portrait of Stanford could be its own movie (The Internship crossed with The Skulls), his gripping account of how a tip turned into a history-making investigation has the makings of All the President’s Men.” —Lily Janiak, San Francisco Chronicle

“The Bonfire of the VCs . . . A vivid, dishy exposé of the sometimes comical, at times seemingly corrupt, efforts by tech funders to seduce undergraduates who smell like future moguls and geniuses, and vice versa.” —Axios

“A romp and rollick of a read.” —Andrew Ross Sorkin, #1 New York Times bestselling author of 1929

“A scorching portrait of a university infiltrated by venture capital and tech firms.” The New York Times

"How to Rule the World [is] a gripping book . . . offering a blow-by-blow account of [Baker's] investigation and ... the university’s culture of excess and cronyism.” —Parmy Olson, Bloomberg

“Baker’s book is a thrilling story of journalistic investigation: effectively, it’s All the President’s Men as a campus novel. . . Every one of us now lives in the domain of Stanford’s self-styled Übermenschen. Baker’s undeniable talent might make me sick with envy, but the truly nauseating thing here is the moral void he sketches at the heart of the tech world.” —Sarah Ditum, The Times

“Theo Baker’s blockbuster new book, How to Rule the World: An Education in Power at Stanford University, has won wide praise for offering a nuanced insider’s look at a towering academic institution beset by ethical challenges.” —Norman Vanamee, Town & Country

“The determination, resourcefulness and sheer courage shown by a young man who turned 18 in the course of that year is remarkable...For all its narrative dash, the true significance of Baker’s book lies not in the story of a brave student journalist nor in the size of the scalp he eventually claimed, but in what it reveals about the ethos of the institution now routinely referred to as ‘America’s top university.’” —Stefan Collini, The New Statesman

“An innocents-abroad memoir packed with jaw-dropping moments . . . The story he tells is less a hero’s journey than a crooked path from innocence to experience . . . To say that colleges are morally formative is a commonplace, but only rarely does a book show in any convincing way how that moral formation happens . . . How to Rule the World demonstrates how thoroughly an educational institution can twist and deform the character of its students.” —Carl Elliott, The Hedgehog Review

“Theo Baker, an investigative journalist wunderkind and soon-to-be Stanford graduate, is not the first to trace Silicon Valley’s rot to his university...But he is the first to document, with rigor and detail, the institution’s recent history and culture...It reads like a memoir crossed with a spy thriller.” —Alex Bronzini-Vender, Washington Monthly

How to Rule the World sounds like exactly the right book for this moment in time.” —Connie Loizos, Tech Crunch

“[How to Rule the World is] an extraordinary, extraordinary thing. . . Theo's a phenom. He's done things that professional reporters would cherish in a 30-year career, and he did them all as a 17 and 18-year-old. . . he's an astonishing young reporter and a very, very good writer, and he's put in the hard work to make this happen. It's an amazing story.” —Ashlee Vance, Core Memory

“In this incendiary account . . . Baker is frank about the toll his reporting took on his social life and his faith in higher education; the book is at its most fascinating when detailing his disillusionment with the ‘rot’ at the heart of academia that prizes the appearance of success over the truth. It’s a confident testament to the power of independent journalism from an author with a bright future.” Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“In this absorbing memoir, a college journalist reveals how his scoops brought down his august school’s leader . . . brisk and punctuated with well-explained details.” Kirkus

“A riveting new book has the inside scoop on the culture that created the tech behemoths attempting to run circles around Washington’s regulators... It's enjoyable and insightful... Baker writes well, and you sometimes forget that he’s barely into his 20s... He proved to be excellent at deep-dive investigative reporting... and brought down the biggest man on campus.” —Claude Marx, FTCWatch

“I am a sucker for books that illuminate cultures born of hubris, stories that make you say, ‘I had no idea this world existed.’ Theo Baker achieves this for several such worlds at the same time: Silicon Valley, ‘Nerd Nation’ (as Stanford calls itself), oligarchy, and precocious youth generally. Poignant, maddening, and genuinely hilarious, How to Rule the World is to be devoured—and fast, before Stanford buys up and sets fire to every copy. (Talk about a burn book!)” —Mark Leibovich, #1 New York Times bestselling author of This Town

How to Rule the World is the story of a young reporter unafraid to challenge Silicon Valley’s billionaires and the powerful institutions that enable them—including his own university. Dogged, fearless, unflinching—Baker proves journalism’s future is alive and fighting. Both a gripping personal journey and a searing indictment of our entanglement with tech wealth and influence, this book shows how real reporting can still unsettle, expose, and hold the powerful to account.” —Emily Chang, national bestselling author and Emmy Award–winning journalist at Bloomberg Originals

“I first loved How to Rule The World because it manages to tell you everything you need to know about America in this particular moment by focusing so closely on the cloistered yet unimaginably powerful world of Stanford. And then I met Theo, a young man so brilliant and erudite that I walked away from our first meeting with a full reading list. His vulnerability and brilliance leap off the page in equal measure.” —Amy Pascal, former chairwoman of Sony Pictures Entertainment, founder of Pascal Pictures, and producer of the Spider-Man films, James Bond, The Post, Little Women, and The Social Network

“Theo Baker has written a page-turning drama about what happens when the search for scientific truth has to compete with personal and institutional power. His remarkable reporting has permanently changed the way we discuss research misconduct. Yet How to Rule the World is so much more. It’s a vital story about how higher education has lost sight of the students and ideals it was created to serve.” —Holden Thorp, editor-in-chief of Science and former chancellor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

“In How to Rule the World, the wunderkind Theo Baker combines the remarkable story of his astounding reporting as a Stanford freshman that led to the downfall of the university’s president with his wry, insightful observations about Stanford’s unique form of Silicon Valley arrogance. Both strands are rendered in spare and propulsive prose, making it a nearly unfathomable accomplishment from someone so young.” —William Cohan, bestselling author of House of Cards

How to Rule the World is a fascinating safari through modern academia, based on meticulous, damning reporting. Essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the culture of money and ambition that has taken hold at one of America’s most storied institutions.” —Jake Tapper, #1 New York Times bestselling author and Emmy Award–winning anchor at CNN

“Stanford is one of America’s most influential and fascinating institutions, and the gulf between those qualities and the attention it receives is vast. The world badly needs an inside account of this mysterious corner of the country from which so much wealth has oozed, and Theo Baker is the perfect author to deliver it.” —Jonathan Chait, staff writer at The Atlantic

“This book is a funny, mind-blowing and infuriating exposé of Silicon Valley’s feeder school.”Michael Grunwald, contributing writer to New York Times Opinion and bestselling author The New New Deal and We Are Eating the Earth

“But if that scandal put Baker on the map, his upcoming book may cement his reputation as the rare young journalist willing to challenge Silicon Valley’s startup machine. . . Baker represents something both exciting and increasingly uncommon: a star student betting his career on accountability journalism.” —Connie Loizos, TechCrunch

Praise for the work of Theo Baker:

“Mr. Baker’s reporting was thorough and fearless—undertaken in circumstances in which he had much to lose. . . . With young people like this, the future of journalism looks bright.” —John Darnton, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and curator and winner of the George Polk Award for Journalism

“Theo Baker’s investigation . . . stands alongside some of the most significant journalistic endeavors of the year.” —Dan Rather Medal for News and Guts

“One of America’s greatest journalists.” —Jonathan Reiner, CNN medical analyst and professor of medicine at George Washington University

“Phenomenal . . . at any level.” —Clara Jeffery, editor-in-chief of Mother Jones

“A great journalism story . . . Journalism can really have an impact.” —Kara Swisher, New York Times bestselling author of Burn Book

“A doggedly reported investigation with immediate impact, and a masterclass in holding the powerful to account.” —Investigative Reporters and Editors Award

“The world's most impressive college student of all time.” —Josh Brener, president of Stanford University on the Emmy Award–winning TV show Silicon Valley