![]() Narration then shifts into the past, describing Elizabeth’s family history, which led to both her desire to make a great deal of money and to do so by doing the most good for the most people. ![]() In a prologue, narration describes how the former chief financial officer of Theranos was summarily fired by Elizabeth Holmes after raising concerns about the company’s products and practices. ![]() The final quarter of the book is written from the more personal, more subjective, first-person perspective of the author, and narrates events surrounding his writing of a series of articles for the Wall Street Journal about Theranos and Holmes. The first three-quarters of the book is written in journalistic, objective, third-person language, and describes the origins and growth of Theranos, a Silicon Valley startup lead and controlled by young Stanford dropout Elizabeth Holmes. Knopf, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. Bad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startup. ![]() The following version of this book was used to create this study guide: Carreyrou, John. ![]()
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