arts&life ? Can We Talk Melissa Rivers chats confi dentially about her mom and the new book that pays homage to her. 331 M elissa Rivers called her mother, Joan, a “maxi- malist,” which she once described as “rich people hoarding.” So when it came time to write a book that would be the ultimate Joan Rivers-fan keepsake, a maximalist title was in order: Joan Rivers Confidential: The Unseen Scrapbooks, Joke Cards, Personal Files, and Photos of a Very Funny Woman Who Kept Everything. Released this week, the book will be available at the upcoming 66th Annual Jewish Book Fair Nov. 2-12. Joan Rivers Confidential ($40; Abrams), by Melissa Rivers with Scott Currie, is 170 pages of memories and mementos of the witty, sharp-talking blond dyna- mo, die-hard New Yorker, world traveler, philanthropist, devoted mother and grandmother. The JN spoke with Melissa Rivers by phone in L.A. and here’s what she had to say: JN: The last time your mom was in Michigan, she spoke to a sell-out Planned Parenthood Joan and Melissa pioneering the red carpet interview at the Oscars 42 October 26 • 2017 jn crowd in 2011. Did she have any Detroit ties? MR: My mother was great friends with the wonderful [Detroit Free Press entertainment columnist] Shirley Eder and they would talk on the phone. JN: The first book you wrote about your mom — The Book of Joan: Tales of Mirth, Mischief and Manipulation — came out just eight months after she passed away in 2014. That must have been so hard to do. MR: It was a crazy, crazy schedule and deadline, but it was also very cathartic for me and my mom’s writing partner, Larry Amoros. We laughed and told stories. I’d walk around without a smile for months and months. But just telling stories about her and writing was so important and it really saved me. I would send pages to friends and they’d start laughing, too. It gave every- one permission to laugh. JN: You co-wrote Joan Rivers Confidential with Scott Currie. What a fabulous trip down mem- ory lane for Joan Rivers’ fans. How did you manage this inten- sive and jam-packed project? MR: The idea to do a scrap- book came up pretty early on, but it was too overwhelming to me. It became a reality about a year ago after my good friend Scott Currie talked me into it. Scott is a phenomenal producer and publicist, and he was a dear, dear friend of my mom’s and a producer on her first show. Scott is the gay son my mom always wanted. JN: Would you say it’s an oversized book or a coffee table book? MR: It’s somewhere in the middle. I wanted it to feel beau- tiful and special and different from a traditional book. It was also very important to me that the price point was very acces- sible to all of her fans and that we were connecting with every woman, just like when she sold her jewelry on QVC. JN: There are hundreds of pictures in the book of her PHOTO BY CHARLES BUSH JULIE YOLLES CONTRIBUTING WRITER