Steve Jobs made daughter Lisa Brennan-Jobs watch intimate moment with stepmother

Seven years after the death of Apple founder Steve Jobs, daughter Lisa Brennan-Jobs has penned a raw take on life with her famous father. In her upcoming memoir, Small Fry, Brennan-Jobs tells of how he teased her about sex at the age of nine, and made her watch as he 'moaned' and kissed his second

Seven years after the death of Apple founder Steve Jobs, daughter Lisa Brennan-Jobs has penned a raw take on life with her famous father.

In her upcoming memoir, Small Fry, Brennan-Jobs tells of how he teased her about sex at the age of nine, and made her watch as he 'moaned' and kissed his second wife, Laurene Powell Jobs, reported The Sun.

An excerpt in the New York Times reveals Brennan-Jobs remembers the day her father embraced his second wife, "pulling her in to a kiss, moving his hand closer to her breasts," and up her thigh, "moaning theatrically".

According to the excerpt, when Brennan-Jobs went to leave the room, her father said, "'hey Lis, stay here. We're having a family moment. It's important that you try to be part of this family.'"

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According to Brennan-Jobs, her father was never threatening – just "awkward".

Brennan-Jobs' mother, Chrisann Brennan, had previously written about a sexual conversation between her daughter and Steve in her own memoir, The Bite In The Apple.

Chrisann wrote of coming home one evening to find Steve "teasing her [Lisa] non-stop about her sexual aspirations."

She wrote that he was "ridiculing her with sexual innuendos," and "joking about bedroom antics between Lisa and this or that guy".

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'You're getting nothing'

Earlier this month, Vanity Fair published an excerpt from Small Fry where Brennan-Jobs describes how it took legal action for her father to acknowledge her.

"In the spring of 1978, when my parents were 23, my mother gave birth to me on their friend Robert's farm in Oregon, with the help of two midwives," she wrote.

"My father arrived a few days later. 'It's not my kid,' he kept telling everyone at the farm."

Jobs chose his baby daughter's name — Lisa, but for the next two years he contributed nothing else.

"Until I was two, my mother supplemented her welfare payments by cleaning houses and waitressing. My father didn't help," she wrote.

In 1980, Steve Jobs was finally sued for child support payments — something he did not take kindly to.

"My father responded by denying paternity, swearing in a deposition that he was sterile and naming another man he said was my father," Brennan-Jobs wrote.

But the child took a DNA test, which gave a 94.4 per cent chance the two were related — the highest possible at that time.

As a result, Jobs was forced to pay US$385 ($570) a month — which he increased to US$500 ($742) — as well as medical insurance until his daughter turned 18.

Just four days after the case was finalised after having been rushed through by Jobs' lawyers, Apple went public.

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Overnight, Jobs was worth $200 million.

By the time Brennan-Jobs was seven, she and her mother had moved 13 times, renting places "informally" and relying on friends to house them.

Her father showed up around once a month, driving a black Porsche convertible while his child and ex-partner struggled to get by.

But despite his coldness, the little girl was fascinated by her "multi-millionaire" dad and clung to the belief he had named the "Lisa" computer after her.

Later in her childhood, Brennan-Jobs would occasionally stay with her father as her mother took college classes.

During one of those visits, the girl finally found the courage to ask her father if she could have his car once he was finished with it — an innocent question from a child that sparked a vicious reply.

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"'Absolutely not', he said in such a sour, biting way that I knew I'd made a mistake," she wrote. 'You're not getting anything', he said. 'You understand? Nothing. You're getting nothing.'

"Did he mean about the car, something else, bigger? I didn't know. His voice hurt — sharp, in my chest. I had made a terrible mistake and he'd recoiled."

Brennan-Jobs offered a partial explanation for her father's continued distance: "I was a blot on a spectacular ascent, as our story did not fit with the narrative of greatness and virtue he might have wanted for himself. My existence ruined his streak," she wrote.

The coldness from her father and his new family — wife Laurene Powell and their three children, Eve, Reed and Erin Jobs — remained, even as Jobs was dying.

Brennan-Jobs described avoiding her brother, sisters and stepmother around the house during a sickbed visit "so I wouldn't be … hurt when they didn't acknowledge me or reply to my hellos".

Small Fry by Lisa Brennan-Jobs will be published on September 4, 2018, by Grove Press.

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- With news.com.au

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