Steve Jobs in 2010
Apple CEO Steve Jobs sits next to the new Apple iPod Hi-Fi which he introduced at an event for press and industry analysts at Apple headquarters in Cupertino, California, February 28, 2006. Reuters/Esther Thomas

Fortune Magazine has released an e-book about the history of Steve Jobs and Apple entitled: All About Steve: The Story of Steve Jobs and Apple from the Pages of Fortune.

The book details the life of Steve Jobs and Apple between 1983 and 2011 with compiled excerpts of articles from Fortune magazine. In addition to interviews with Steve Jobs himself, it chronicles the timeline of the iPod, iTunes, iPhone, iPad and Apple store from its creation to present day.

According to PCWorld, the e-book features articles from journalists Brent Schlender, Peter Elkind, and Adam Lashinsky.

Steve Jobs, who keeps his life quite quiet, is set to collaborate on an authorized autobiography with the help of Walter Isaacson, according to The New York Times.

Here is the description listed on Amazon, where the Steve Jobs e-book is available for $8.79.

Steve Jobs' legacy is clear: The most innovative business leader of our time, the man FORTUNE named CEO of the Decade in 2009. Now from the pages of FORTUNE comes an anthology of 17 classic stories spanning the years 1983 to 2011 about the cultural icon who revolutionized computing, telephones, movies, music, retailing, and product design. The stories lay out in unparalleled detail the career of a man with relentless drive and a single underlying passion-to carry out his vision of how all of us would use technology.

In the end he was proved right a billion times over, and his company Apple became one of the most successful enterprises on the planet. All these stories are the product of deep reporting. In many cases FORTUNE's writers spent hours interviewing Jobs and delving into his mind. The result is a singular journalistic collection, which will leave you with a comprehensive picture of Steve Jobs and Apple, a picture that is complex in the making yet simple in its triumph, managing editor Andy Serwer wrote in the book's foreward.