What prompted this book? Was it an effort to know Anthony Bourdain better?
This book was conceived very shortly after Tony’s death in June 2018, and it came out of a conversation between myself, Tony’s longtime US editor Daniel Halpern, and his longtime literary agent, Kimberly Witherspoon, who is now my agent as well. We had been fielding all manner of pitches and queries from people wanting to write about Tony, people wanting to make films about him, and people hoping to audition to replace him on television. It was overwhelming, and there was a shared desire to create something that came from a place of already knowing him, as a way to tell the rest of his story, as accurately as possible, and with the permission of his estate.
You spoke to people who knew Tony through different periods of his life. What were your favourite conversations, the most insightful?
I worked closely with him for nearly a decade, and I’d known him for almost 20 years, but each conversation I had for this book revealed something that I hadn’t previously known about Tony – some big revelations, and some minor details. I especially enjoyed talking with Tony’s first wife, Nancy, who had known him since they were young teenagers, and had been with him through high school, college, cooking school and his long career as a chef. She’s a very private person, and also very funny and smart, with an excellent memory for the ways in which Tony changed and grew over the years. I was so pleased that she trusted me enough to open up for this book. I also very much enjoyed speaking with CNN anchor Anderson Cooper, who has spent as much time on the road as Tony did, and understands how that can isolate and change a person. He was also quite forthcoming about the loss of a family member by suicide.