Over a 60-year career in public affairs, Vannevar Bush--engineer, inventor, educator, and public face of government-funded science--sought to eliminate roadblocks to innovation in science and technology. In Pieces of the Action, a collection of memoir-essays, he reflects on his role in shaping the policies and organizations that powered American research and development in the mid-20th century.
As the architect and administrator of an R&D pipeline that efficiently coordinated the work of civilian scientists and the military during World War II, he was central to catalyzing the development of radar and the proximity fuze, the mass production of penicillin, and the initiation of the Manhattan Project. Pieces of the Action offers his hard-won lessons on how to operate and manage effectively within complex organizations, build bridges between people and disciplines, and drive ambitious, unprecedented programs to fruition. With wry humor, Bush also shares personal observations and anecdotes--pelting cows with apples, poking fun at servicemen who tried to keep his own invention secret from him--that offer a glimpse of the personality behind the accolades.
Originally published in 1970, this updated edition includes 15 archival images from Bush's life and career and a foreword from entrepreneur and Idea Machines podcast host Ben Reinhardt that contextualizes the lessons Pieces of the Action can offer to contemporary readers: that change depends both on heroic individuals and effective organizations; that a leader's job is one of coordination; and that the path from idea to innovation is a long and winding one, inextricably bound to those involved--those enduring figures who have a piece of the action.
Physicist, Immigrant, Pilot, Dad. Former Caltech, Hyperloop, NASA JPL. Founder @terraformindies. Build more solar!
Just finished "pieces of the action", a memoir by Vannevar Bush. Equal parts curmudgeon and extremely thought provoking.
Publishing @stripepress, Board @ifp | Host of Beneath the Surface, a pod about infrastructure: https://t.co/24B9THLYI2
It's not a coincidence that @Ben_Reinhardt is the person we chose to write the foreword for @stripepress's recent reprint of Pieces of the Action, by Vannevar Bush. Rooting for Ben, @Spec__Tech, and everyone involved! https://t.co/xHejGGmm4D
Supporting founders to solve the 🌎 world's biggest problems @FiftyYears | accelerating science through Fifty 50 | 🧘🏼♀️
Read this on Pieces of the Action by Vannevar Bush “He showed me models of various weird gadgets. I had plenty of efforts (inventions) to tell him about ... neither of us would have spilled things except to a fellow practitioner.” The most useful wisdom often comes from peers!
--Jason Crawford, writer at The Roots of Progress
"Pieces of the Action provides a window into the way Bush saw
himself―not as a great man or leader, but as part of a larger cultural
tradition, equipping new generations with knowledge from past ones. I
came away encouraged and inspired by the knowledge that great things can
be built in spite of stagnation, rigid norms, and conventions, through
the determination and foresight of people who work to change
institutions―and build new ones, too."
--Saloni Dattani, cofounder and editor of Works in Progress and researcher at Our World in Data
"Pieces of the Action is not just about science and innovation, it's
about state capacity. Anyone who longs for renewed, effective
institutions will find the wisdom of a kindred spirit reflecting on how
to build them."
--Eli Dourado, economist and senior research fellow at the Center for Growth and Opportunity at Utah State University
"It's hard to deny that Vannevar Bush was at the nexus of an astounding
number of people and events that shaped the modern world. In Pieces of
the Action, he works hard to give us a window into his thought
processes, and from them distill timeless lessons about leadership,
research, institution building, and human nature. Bush was a scientist, a
statesman, an entrepreneur, a tinkerer, a leader, an educator, and an
excellent storyteller, and Pieces of the Action has a yarn and a lesson
for everyone."
--Ben Reinhardt, CEO of PARPA, researcher at the Astera Institute, and host of the Idea Machines podcast
"Pieces of the Action catalogs the scientists and engineers who were
pivotal to an Allied victory in World War II―and how the ad-hoc
organizations born out of that crisis ultimately provided the blueprints
for our modern scientific institutions. If you want to understand the
'man in the arena' at the center of it all, this discursive, blunt, and
often funny memoir is the best place to start."
--Alec Stapp, cofounder and co-CEO of the Institute for Progress
"Written without pretension. . . this volume will richly reward readers
from a wide variety of fields―science, engineering, industry,
education, the military, politics, and public and business
administration."
--Irvin Stewart, Science
"Pieces of the
Action is an often-whimsical ride through time and the mind of the man
whose insight, strategic instincts, and institutional empire-building
formed the basis of the modern scientific state. One comes away with a
view of scientific development that is anything but linear: the
gravitational weight of historical contingencies, idiosyncratic
personnel, and key management decisions described in Pieces of the
Action continue to profoundly impact us today."
--Caleb Watney, cofounder and co-CEO of the Institute for Progress