"An important wake-up call with solid historical context...America's tech lead is shrinking, so the time has come to develop policies to ensure that the secret machinery of the digital era continues to operate smoothly...Miller's implicit message to U.S. policymakers is to recognize the danger and act accordingly."
--Kirkus Reviews
"An insightful history... Well-researched and incisive, this is a noteworthy look at the intersection of technology, economics, and politics."
--Publisher's Weekly
"Miller uncovers the complex history of the microchip...Touching on U.S.-China relations, globalization, and the microchip industry, this insightful book is key to understanding the chip's power in shaping all aspects of society in the U.S. and the world at large."
--Booklist
"The most interesting book [I have] read all year."
--Ryan Heath, writing in Politico's "Global Insider"
"A riveting history of the semiconductor by Chris Miller, a historian at Tufts University...His volume could not be better timed...[features] vivid accounts [and] colorful characters."
--Financial Times
"In Chip War, his elegant new book, Chris Miller of Tufts University shows how economic, geopolitical and technological forces shaped this essential industry... For those seeking to understand it better, Chip War is a fine place to start."
--The Economist
"Fascinating...A historian by training, Miller walks the reader through decades of semiconductor history - a subject that comes to life thanks to [his] use of colorful anecdotes...Chip War makes clear that the battle for the multi-billion-dollar struggle for semiconductor supremacy in an increasingly-digitized world will only intensify in the years to come."
--Forbes
Financial Times Business Book of the Year
An Economist Best Book of the Year
New York Times Bestseller
#1 on Fortune's Spring CEO Survey of the Best Book They've Read in the Past Year
Winner 2023 PROSE Award for Outstanding Work by a Trade Publisher
Winner of the Arthur Ross Book Award
Shortlisted for the Lionel Gelber Prize "Pulse quickening...Chip War makes a whale of a case: that the chip industry now determines both the structure of the global economy and the balance of geopolitical power. But the book is not a polemic. Rather, it's a nonfiction thriller -- equal parts "The China Syndrome" and "Mission Impossible"....If any book can make general audiences grok the silicon age -- and finally recognize how it rivals the atomic age for drama and import -- Chip War is it."
--New York Times