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Estimated reading time: 2 minutes
Dan’s Biz Bookshelf: ‘Abundance’
Every once in a while, a book comes along that doesn’t just make you think, it makes you sit up straighter and ask a hard question: Why aren’t we doing this better? Abundance is exactly that kind of book.
In a time when so much of our national conversation revolves around scarcity—housing, energy, infrastructure, and opportunity—Klein and Thompson flip the script. They argue, persuasively and intelligently, that America’s real problem isn’t a lack of ideas. It’s a lack of execution.
The authors lay out a simple but profound premise: The United States still produces some of the world’s greatest innovations. Our universities, entrepreneurs, engineers, and researchers remain second to none. But somewhere between invention and implementation, the system jams.
We invent brilliantly, but we deploy slowly. That’s where this book makes a difference.
One of the most compelling sections is Chapter Five: “Deploy.” In this chapter, Klein and Thompson put their finger on one of the great paradoxes of modern America: We are extraordinary at creating new technologies but strangely ineffective at actually putting them to work at scale.
Think about it.
America helped invent the modern clean-energy revolution. We pioneered advanced solar technologies, cutting-edge battery research, and breakthrough semiconductor design. Yet when it comes to building the factories, power grids, housing, and infrastructure needed to bring those innovations to life, the process becomes painfully slow. Permits get stalled, projects are bogged down, and processes multiply.
The authors offer examples that will make any practical-minded reader shake their head: High-speed rail projects that take decades to approve, housing developments strangled by endless regulatory hurdles, and energy infrastructure delayed by overlapping approval systems. Meanwhile, other countries take American innovations and deploy them faster.
Klein and Thompson argue that true abundance comes from connecting innovation with execution. In other words, the ability to build, implement, and scale ideas is just as important as the ability to invent them. That message should resonate with anyone who has ever tried to run a company, launch a product, or build something real.
What makes Abundance especially powerful is that it refuses to wallow in pessimism. To me, this is a book about possibility. The authors believe that America can still lead the world in building the future, but only if we remove the obstacles that prevent good ideas from becoming real projects.
Their argument is thoughtful, pragmatic, and refreshingly constructive, rooted in common sense. Which is why I believe this book should be read by every thinking American, from business leaders and policymakers to engineers, entrepreneurs, and anyone who cares about the country’s future.
Because the lesson of Abundance is simple: Innovation creates possibility, and deployment creates prosperity. If America learns to do both well again, the future could be far brighter than we think.
Title: Abundance
Authors: Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson
Copyright: :2025 by Avid Reader Press/ Simon& Schuster
Pages: 296 With notes
Price: $15.99 Kindle Edition
More Columns from Dan's Biz Bookshelf
Dan’s Biz Bookshelf: ‘The Next RenAIssance: AI and the Expansion of Human Potential’Dan’s Biz Bookshelf: ‘Notorious: Leadership Lessons From History’s Most Notorious Leaders’ (New Audio Version)
Dan’s Biz Bookshelf: ‘The 'NVIDIA Way: Jensen Huang and the Making of a Tech Giant’
Dan’s Biz Bookshelf: 'Breakneck: China’s Quest to Engineer the Future'
Dan’s Biz Bookshelf: 'The New Geography: The Global Contest for Breakthrough Technologies'
Dan’s Biz Bookshelf: ‘iWar: Fortnite, Elon Musk, Spotify, WeChat, and Laying Siege to Apple’s Empire’
Dan’s Biz Bookshelf: ‘Everybody Matters'
Dan’s Biz Bookshelf: ‘The First-Time Manager’