Joe Eszterhas writes off throat cancer
2/10/2004 John Morgan USA Today Basic Instinct scribe Joe Eszterhas is known for his dark tales populated with seductive killers. But like a character from one of his famous movies, Eszterhas was being slowly murdered by two killers he thought he loved cigarettes and alcohol. Their murder weapon was cancer of the larynx. And they almost got away with it. "I started smoking when I was 12 years old and drinking when I was 14," says Eszterhas, whose just-released novel Hollywood Animal will hit the New York Times best-seller list this week. "By 2000, I was smoking four packs of Salem lights every day and drinking a significant amount. My voice began to get hoarse." Eszterhas says he wasn't concerned. He had experienced hoarseness before on several occasions after having nasal polyps removed. So the million-dollar screen writer casually went in to see his "hot shot Beverly Hills ENT guys." "I was diagnosed with a benign polyp that was wrapped around my vocal cords," Eszterhas recalls. "They said that it was nothing alarming. It was outpatient and no rush. It was just a polyp not unlike all the other ones." But it wasn't. After moving his family back to Ohio in March of 2001, the hoarseness got worse. With the renowned Cleveland Clinic nearby, Eszterhas decided to have the polyp removed rather than wait any longer. "The Cleveland Clinic throat guy performed the same test as the Beverly Hills doctors," Eszterhas explains, describing the flexible laryngoscope, a lighted tube with [...]