Skip to content
Entertainment
Link copied to clipboard

Publishers aren't eager for Bush memoirs

NEW YORK - In less than three months, President-elect Barack Obama will take office and the Bush administration will belong to history. With the president reportedly interested in writing about his White House years, publishers have a suggestion:

It's believed that Bush's low approval ratings won't make him a hot author right now.
It's believed that Bush's low approval ratings won't make him a hot author right now.Read more

NEW YORK - In less than three months, President-elect Barack Obama will take office and the Bush administration will belong to history. With the president reportedly interested in writing about his White House years, publishers have a suggestion:

Take your time.

"If I were advising President Bush, given how the public feels about him right now, I think patience would probably be something that I would encourage," said Paul Bogaards, executive director of publicity for Alfred A. Knopf, which in 2004 released Bill Clinton's million-selling "My Life."

"Certainly the longer he waits, the better," agreed Marji Ross, president and publisher of the conservative Regnery Publishing, which is more likely to take on anti-Obama books in the next few years than any praises of Bush.

"There's a pent-up frustration among conservatives that will focus their attention on a Barack Obama presidency and lead them to buy a lot of books about Barack Obama. But that's not the kind of emotion that anyone is going to use to turn to reading a memoir by a conservative president."

In a poor economy, it's not a great time for anyone to shop a book - certainly not a deeply unpopular president. Bush's approval ratings are in the 20s and Republicans are at a low moment after Tuesday, when Obama defeated Sen. John McCain by a convincing margin and Democrats expanded majorities in Congress.

Bush has likened his fate to Harry Truman, highly disliked upon leaving office in 1953 but now virtually iconic in American politics. But it took years for him to gain such affection, and Truman's two-volume memoir, published in the 1950s, is less remembered than a book about him published in the 1990s, David McCullough's million-selling "Truman."

"Only in hindsight will history show whether Bush is deemed to be a good president who sacrificed his presidency for what he believed in or . . . a failed president," Ross said.

Bush's immediate predecessor, Clinton, signed up with Knopf within months of leaving office, but his approval ratings were far higher than Bush's, even though he was impeached for lying about his affair with Monica Lewinsky. The first President Bush, defeated for re-election by Clinton, never did write a memoir. He instead worked on a foreign-policy book, "A World Transformed," with his close friend and National Security adviser, Brent Scowcroft.

Anti-Bush books have been dependable hit-makers during a rough decade for the industry, but publishers are unsure of the market for a book by Bush. Few believe he has a chance to get the $15 million Clinton received for "My Life."

"Publishers say that besides Bush and [Vice President Dick] Cheney, interest likely will focus on Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who has said she wants to write a book, and on Laura Bush, who has said nothing about a memoir but could continue a recent trend of first ladies outselling their husbands. She has already inspired a best-selling novel, Curtis Sittenfeld's "American Wife."

"When I give readings, a disproportionate number of people who buy my book are middle-aged women who say, 'My mother loves Laura Bush!' So I suspect that I and a lot of 90-year-old ladies would line up for a Laura Bush memoir on the day of publication," Sittenfeld said. *