A bit of light holiday reading for me a few weeks back:
Why do you want to read a book about a beardy bloke you don't like very much?
Well simply it's one of the best insights into the British home computer market of the 1980's you'll ever read. 12 pages on the takeover of Sinclair with quotes from Uncle Clive himself? The full story of how the CPC came to be? The abandoned colour PCW that would have been CPC compatible? It's filled with this stuff. Yes the book has loads about stockbrokers, floatations, etc, but chapters on the CPC, PCW and Sinclair takeover all stand out as genuinely enlightening.
Despite being an unofficial biography, it's been done with the full corporation of Sugar and Amstrad. The author gets some rather juicy quotes from the beardy one. Sugar on the collapse of the market Xmas '84 that severely damaged Sinclair and Acorn:
And on the situation prior to the Sinclair takeover:
It's all there writ in black and white. Ignore all the boring business staff and just focus in on the Speccy and CPC stuff. Loads of quotes from the people who worked there and even Sir Clive himself. Yes you might only end up reading 25% of the book, but you'll come away enlightened.
The book ends in early 1990 (the author was killed working as a journalist during the Gulf war) so there's no CPC Plus or Em@ilers which is a bit disappointing. The net result is the book doesn't actually feel like it's finished.
The cost of this retro orgy? Just a penny + postage. I spoil you!
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/offer-listing/0330319000/ref=dp_olp_used?ie=UTF8&condition=used