Bono on mortality, drinking with Sinatra, and U2’s ‘ugly pop song’ that became US No 1 hit – reflections on ‘a life playing stadiums for 35 years’
- The rock legend was tight-lipped about his 2016 heart surgery, but now addresses this and other aspects of his life, from U2’s huge success, to losing close ones
- In Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story, the singer recalls triumphs and regrets, such as when U2 dropped their 2014 album onto every personal Apple device

Several years ago, U2 fans wondered about the brush with death experienced by the band’s captivating frontman, Bono.
Usually talkative, Bono refused to elaborate on this intense health scare, saying he would discuss it in due time.
That time arrives in the opening pages of Surrender: 40 Songs, One Story, the singer’s rhythmical, time-shifting memoir written with the refinement and astuteness that we’ve come to expect from one of rock’s most profound lyricists.
He was born, he says, with “an eccentric heart” – a heart that years later would require eight hours of surgery, to repair a “blister” on his aorta.

Bono turns his recollections of the 2016 operation – the doctor “wielding his blade with the combined forces of science and butchery”; his desire to have the warmth of his wife, Ali, beside him – into a metaphor for success.