Steve Jobs's early decision to put off surgery and rely on less conventional treatments angered and upset his family, the book says.
In his last years, Steven
P. Jobs veered from exotic diets to cutting-edge
treatments as he fought the cancer that ultimately took his life, according to
a new biography to be published on Monday.
His early decision to put off surgery and rely
instead on fruit juices, acupuncture, herbal remedies and other treatments —
some of which he found on the Internet — infuriated and distressed his family,
friends and physicians, the book says. From the time of his first diagnosis in
October 2003, until he received surgery in July 2004, he kept his condition
largely private — secret from Apple
employees, executives and shareholders, who were misled.
Although the broad outlines of Mr. Jobs’s
struggle with pancreatic cancer are known, the new biography, byWalter Isaacson,
offers new insight and details. Friends, family members and physicians spoke to
Mr. Isaacson openly about Mr. Jobs’s illness and his shifting strategy for
managing it. According to Mr. Isaacson, Mr. Jobs was one of 20 people in the
world to have all the genes of his cancer tumor and his normal DNA sequenced.
The price tag at the time: $100,000.
But the 630-page biography spans Mr. Jobs’s
entire life, and also includes previously unknown details about his romantic
life, his marriage, his relationship with his sister and his business dealings.
Mr. Isaacson conducted more than 40 interviews over two years with Mr. Jobs,
who died on Oct. 5.
A copy of the book was obtained by The New York
Times before it officially went on sale.
In October 2003, Mr. Jobs got the news about his
cancer, which was detected by a CT scan. One of his first calls, according to
the book, was to Larry Brilliant, a physician and epidemiologist, who would
later become the head of Google’s philanthropic arm. The men went way back,
having first met at an ashram in India .
“Do you still believe in God?” Mr. Jobs asked.
Mr. Brilliant spoke for a while about religion
and different paths to belief, and then asked Mr. Jobs what was wrong. “I have
cancer,” Mr. Jobs replied.
Mr. Jobs put off surgery for nine months, a fact
first reported in 2008 in Fortune magazine.
Friends and family, including his sister, Mona
Simpson, urged Mr. Jobs to have surgery and chemotherapy, Mr. Isaacson writes.
But Mr. Jobs delayed the medical treatment. His friend and mentor, Andrew
Grove, the former head of Intel, who had overcome prostate cancer, told Mr.
Jobs that diets and acupuncture were not a cure for his cancer. “I told him he
was crazy,” he said.
Art Levinson, a member of Apple’s board and
chairman of Genentech, recalled that he pleaded with Mr. Jobs and was
frustrated that he could not persuade him to have surgery.
His wife, Laurene Powell, recalled those days,
after the cancer diagnosis. “The big thing was that he really was not ready to
open his body,” she said. “It’s hard to push someone to do that.” She did try,
however, Mr. Isaacson writes. “The body exists to serve the spirit,” she
argued.
When he did take the path of surgery and science,
Mr. Jobs did so with passion and curiosity, sparing no expense, pushing the
frontiers of new treatments. According to Mr. Isaacson, once Mr. Jobs decided
on the surgery and medical science, he became an expert — studying, guiding and
deciding on each treatment. Mr. Isaacson said Mr. Jobs made the final decision
on each new treatment regimen.
The DNA sequencing that Mr. Jobs ultimately went
through was done by a collaboration of teams at Stanford, Johns Hopkins,
Harvard and the Broad Institute of MIT. The sequencing, Mr. Isaacson writes,
allowed doctors to tailor drugs and target them to the defective molecular
pathways.
A doctor told Mr. Jobs that the pioneering
treatments of the kind he was undergoing would soon make most types of cancer a
manageable chronic disease. Later, Mr. Jobs told Mr. Isaacson that he was
either going to be one of the first “to outrun a cancer like this” or be among
the last “to die from it.”
According to Mr. Isaacson, his interviews with
Mr. Jobs were occasionally punctuated by music listening sessions in Mr. Jobs’s
living room. During one interview, Mr. Jobs played music from his new iPad 2,
cycling through the Beatles, a Gregorian chant performed by Benedictine monks,
a Bach fugue and “Catch the Wind” by the Scottish musician Donovan.
Mr. Jobs’s personal affinity for music, and his
friendships with musicians, helped him maneuver deals to build the iTunes
library and special versions of the iPod.
It also moved into his private life at times, Mr. Isaacson writes. After Mr.
Jobs learned he had cancer, he exacted a promise from Yo-Yo Ma to play at his
funeral.
Mr. Jobs sometimes entertained business guests at
his home. Rupert Murdoch, the conservative head of News Corporation, came twice
for dinner. Mr. Jobs joked to Mr. Isaacson that he had to hide the kitchen
knives from his wife, Laurene Powell, because of her liberal views.
The book “Steve Jobs” by Walter Isaacson.
The book provides new details on Apple’s business
dealings and rivalries. The author recounts Mr. Jobs getting into a shouting
match with co-founders of Google, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, in 2008, over
Google’s development of Android software for smartphones, which would
compete with Apple’s iPhone.
Mr. Jobs told Mr. Isaacson that he regarded
Android as a “stolen product,” copying Apple technology.
In romance, Mr.
Isaacson writes, Mr. Jobs fell hard, but often made it hard on the women in his
life. In 1985, he met and fell in love with a computer consultant, Tina Redse.
They lived together on and off for years, and Mr. Jobs proposed in 1989. But she
declined, telling friends he would “drive her crazy.”
Later, he met Ms. Powell, a former Goldman Sachs
trader who had enrolled at Stanford business school. They fell in love and she
moved in with him. But his behavior could be maddening. On the first day of
1990, he proposed, and never mentioned it again for months. In September,
exasperated, she moved out. The next month, Mr. Isaacson writes, he gave her a
diamond engagement ring, and she moved back in. Eventually they married.
The book also offers some tidbits about Mr.
Jobs’s legendary attention to detail, which, according to Mr. Isaacson,
extended to a luxury yacht that he began designing in 2009. The design is sleek
and minimalist, with 40-foot-long glass walls. It is being built in the Netherlands by
the custom yacht firm Feadship, the book says.
Starting last spring, Mr. Jobs met individually
or in pairs with people he wanted to see before he died. Bill Gates, co-founder
of Microsoft, was one of them. He came to Mr. Jobs’s house in Palo
Alto , Calif. , in
May, and they spent more than three hours together, reminiscing, Mr. Isaacson
writes.
By 2011, Mr. Gates, though still Microsoft
chairman, had for years focused most of his time on his huge charitable
foundation. Mr. Jobs told Mr. Isaacson that Mr. Gates was happier than he had
ever seen him.
They talked about the emotional rewards of family
life and having children, and the good fortune to have married wisely. Mr.
Gates later recalled to Mr. Isaacson the two laughed that Laurene had kept Mr.
Jobs “semi-sane” and that Melinda, Mr. Gates’s wife, “kept me semi-sane.”
The book will be published by Simon &
Schuster, with a list price of $35.


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