13/03/2015 17:57
Steve Jobs rejected liver transplant offer from Tim Cook
Steve Jobs rejected an offer of a liver transplant from Tim Cook in 2009, a new biography of the late Apple co-founder reveals, according to The Guardian.
Despite becoming increasingly ill from cancer, Jobs angrily turned down the proposal by the man who would go on to run Apple after he died.
“He cut me off at the legs, almost before the words were out of my mouth,” said Cook. “‘No,’ [Jobs] said. ‘I’ll never let you do that. I’ll never do that’.”
The revelation is made in Becoming Steve Jobs, by Fast Company executive editor Rick Tetzeli and co-author Brent Schlender, published later this month.
The incident, which underlines the closeness of the relationship between the two men, showed how selfless Jobs was, according to Cook.
“It was: ‘No, I’m not doing that!’ He kind of popped up in bed and said that. And this was during a time when things were just terrible. Steve only yelled at me four or five times during the 13 years I knew him, and this was one of them,” Cook said.
Jobs, who suffered from a rare type of pancreatic cancer, went on to receive a liver transplant in 2009.
He took a six-month medical leave of absence that year, and another period in mid-January 2011 before stepping down as chief executive in August.
He died in October 2011 aged 56.
The book also reveals the close friendship between Jobs and Bob Iger, chairman and chief executive of the Walt Disney Company, in the final yars of his life.