Source Code cover art

Source Code

My Beginnings

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Source Code

By: Bill Gates
Narrated by: Wil Wheaton, Bill Gates
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About this listen

Brought to you by Penguin.

Bill Gates is one of the most transformative figures of our age. In Source Code he takes us back to his beginnings.

He describes with candour his childhood in Seattle, the centrality of family – his close relationship with his card-playing grandmother and his demanding but caring parents – his struggles to fit in, his rebelliousness, his first deep friendships and the impact of losing his closest friend.

We see Gates’s extraordinary mind developing, the restless teenager who discovered a love of coding and computing at the dawn of a new era and felt that ‘by applying my brain, I could solve even the world’s most complex mysteries’. We see the earliest signs of his phenomenal business acumen, which led him to drop out of Harvard at the age of 20 to devote all his energies to Microsoft, the company he started with his childhood friend Paul Allen. He writes about his first involvement with three Steves – Jobs, Wozniak and Ballmer – who would play a crucial role in so much that followed.

The book ends in the late 1970s when Microsoft, still with only a dozen employees, signed its first deal with Apple. The deals would go on and Microsoft would grow unimaginably. Yet Gates never forgot his mother’s reminder that he was merely a steward of any wealth that he gained. This warm and inspiring book, Bill Gates’ origin story, allows readers to understand his energy and ambition – and to see how he sets himself in the world.

'A highly readable account of his early life up to the creation of Microsoft, Source Code is unusually personal and laced with self awareness.' - Financial Times

'A gentle, pensive autobiography...The pleasure of this reflective book is the sense of Old Bill Gates peeking over your shoulder, as bemused by Young Bill Gates as you are.' - Daily Mail


©2025 Bill Gates (P)2025 Penguin Audio

Business Leadership Management & Leadership Professionals & Academics Science & Technology Inspiring

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All stars
Most relevant  
I get the impression that he and his parents and their community were doing the right things in the right place at the right time. And had the means to do so . This say lot for that section of society at that time. Elon Musk take note.
The narration is spoilt by the narrator "trailing off" at the end of sentences, often leaving the last word completely inaudible. Words are literally missing.

ideal America?

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The story of success is well narrated but sometimes the technology overpowers the telling. From ordinary beginnings with solid family support a tale of hard won achievement.

An admirable gentleman

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A lot of Bill's personality resonates with my own upbringing and struggles. It's fascinating how different life was for him growing up compared to me in the UK. I'm hoping for part 2 of his source code to hear about the Microsoft adventure and onwards.

Great story.

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I enjoyed this autobiography of his early life - the narrator did a good job - but the sound/recording quality was in places, terrible It seemed very distorted and fading away at the end of some sentences as if moving away from the microphone. I deducted one star for that reason. Otherwise it was a very good good listen.

Poor quality sound

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A story of a competitive child who wants to prove himself to his mum while following and learning from his dad's approach in dealing with challenges.

Very interesting beginning

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I kept wondering why Mark Watney was talking to me, not bill gates, but once I figured that out … all was good.

Fascinating and … genuine

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Amazing book full of experience and a long list of take aways. Business, family, life..

Inspirational!

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A fascinating book, but I have to say I found Wil Wheaton’s read distracting. I’m just not a fan of an actors take on another person’s life. It isn’t a role. Fondly reminiscing and chuckling over some detail in the text is just an odd take.

Sorry Wil

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Gates’ story is fundamental to the story of the PC age and how it came about. Fascinating how timing makes such a difference to a life. If he was born now, he’d probably be diagnosed as autistic, adhd and would be immersed in computer games going by his story of his character and his own admission. Also interesting to wonder whether the US entrepreneurial culture was essential to Microsoft’s establishment and whether a euro or Asian upstart would have germinated as well. Only drawback is a heavily accented American narration that grates over time.

Seminal autobiography at the dawn of the PC age

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Great insights into the early life of one of the great minds of our times. Leading life through myriad experiences, friendship, loss, business acumen and all the steps in those initial years are described with such colour and passion.

Genius in the making

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