'Silicon' is a new five-pound art book charting the semiconductor revolution with full-page die shots and commentary — 384 page tome is $99 to pre-order now

Silicon
(Image credit: Arena Magazine)

Arena has announced its first book, which is simply called Silicon. Best known for its magazine, which celebrates American ingenuity in business, technology, and civilization, Arena’s stylish and premium “coffee table book like no other” is up for pre-order now. Silicon is priced at $99, including tax and free shipping in the U.S. And Canada. Expect it to make a five-pound impression on your doormat in May.

Silicon is described by Arena, not as a dense scientific technical work, but as “an art book and anthology.” In other words, it isn’t only for semiconductor wizards like Anton Shilov. I think it will also appeal to pea-brained folk like myself, or anyone else who appreciates the visual appeal of technology, enhanced by the book’s great presentation and print quality.

On the topic of physical quality, Arena boasts that Silicon has a “special foil stamped cover, a genuine thread binding, and 384 pages of European archival paper.” The shimmering light-diffracting cover particularly hits the coffee table segment right in the bullseye.

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As an anthology, readers get 10 independent chapters to absorb. The prose is liberally punctuated with “hundreds of full-page photographs of computer chips from the last 50 years,” explains the pre-order website. So, you can dip into Silicon willy-nilly for any of the 10 self-contained segments. Might we suggest some matching bookmarks?

(Image credit: Arena Magazine)

The first chapter is called Teaching Sand to Think and was penned by Dylan Patel & Jeff Koch. You may have seen Patel mentioned on 3DTested from time to time, due to the SemiAnalysis semiconductor industry insights and reports he often shares. Other chapters cover subjects such as Moore’s Law, ASML’s Throne, the Nvidia Factor, and more.

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Silicon chapters

Teaching Sand to Think
Dylan Patel & Jeff Koch

The inside story of how technologists are turning silicon into machine intelligence.

Waiting for Berzelius
Julia Steinberg

How a Swedish chemist isolated silicon and anticipated the search for machine consciousness.

The Czochralski Crucible
Brian Balkus

The Polish scientist who made silicon pure enough for computers was buried in an unmarked grave.

And Then There Were Eight
Maxwell Meyer

The story of how the “Traitorous Eight” created the foundations of Silicon Valley.

Moore’s Laws
Rob L’Heureux

The sixty‑year marathon to fulfill Gordon Moore’s predictions of exponential semiconductor growth.

ASML’s Throne
Stephen McBride

How a struggling startup in a leaky Dutch shed built the most important and complex machine in the world.

The Nvidia Factor
Zaitoon Zafar

The story of how Jensen Huang transformed Nvidia from a gaming company into the engine of the AI revolution.

After Complexity
Anna‑Sofia Lesiv

In building machines that “think,” humans have created systems so complex we no longer fully understand them.

Freedom in the Silicon Age
Miquel Vila

Silicon technologies are young—what might they mean across the long arc of human history?

The Silicon Man
Ginevra Davis

Are humans biological bootloaders for our silicon successors?

The animated GIF in Arena’s social media posts promoting Silicon, as well as the product page’s visual carousel, provide a decent preview of leafing through this weighty tome. Its looks like it could be an essential read to discover silicon, "the element that built modernity." Furthermore, it will provide perspective to “the world of transistors, chips, and the greatest technology revolution of all time,” reckons Arena.

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Mark Tyson
News Editor