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  • Clinton's Memoirs to Be Released in June

    Associated Press
    April 26 2004

    Clinton's Memoirs to Be Released in June

    HILLEL ITALIE
    Associated Press


    NEW YORK - The suspense is over, almost. Former President Clinton's
    memoirs will be published in late June, and promotion will begin a
    few weeks earlier with a speech at BookExpo America, the industry's
    annual convention.

    "It is the fullest and most nuanced account of a presidency ever
    written, and one of the most revealing and remarkable memoirs I have
    ever had the honor of publishing," Sonny Mehta, president and
    editor-in-chief of Alfred A. Knopf, said in a statement Monday.

    "He talks with candor about his successes, as well as his setbacks,
    looking at both his career in public service and his life."

    The book, for which Clinton received a reported $10 million to $12
    million, will be called "My Life." Knopf is planning a first printing
    of 1.5 million, a realistic number given the success of "Living
    History," the memoirs of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.

    Nearly 1.7 million copies of the hardcover of "Living History" are in
    print and a 525,000 first printing was announced for the paperback,
    which just came out.

    If the former president should fail to sell more books than the first
    lady, he won't be alone. Memoirs by Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan
    both proved less popular than those written by their wives.

    No precise date has been set for the book, which Clinton is still
    completing. Details on the book's length, cover and promotional tour
    are also being worked out. One event has been scheduled: Clinton will
    speak at BookExpo America, which takes place in Chicago from June
    3-6. Then-first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke at BookExpo in
    1995.

    Like Bob Woodward's "Plan of Attack" and Richard Clarke's "Against
    All Enemies," Clinton's book will likely make its way into the
    presidential campaign, especially if the former president defends his
    record on fighting terrorism.

    The book was edited by Robert Gottlieb, who has worked with such
    Pulitzer Prize winners as Robert Caro, Toni Morrison and Katharine
    Graham.

    But it will be an admittedly hurried production, with Knopf having
    just two months to convert the manuscript into a finished book, a
    process that often takes several months.

    If Bill Clinton turns out a first-rate memoir, especially about his
    presidential years, he will be a true path breaker. The only highly
    regarded presidential memoir is by Ulysses Grant, who devoted the
    vast majority of the book to his triumphant Civil War military
    leadership and wrote virtually nothing about his often disastrous
    presidency.

    Most presidential works have the dull, self-serving tone of a
    prepared speech. They suffer from the impersonal hand of a ghost
    writer or from the impersonal tastes of the president. The memoirs of
    Herbert Hoover, for example, include balance sheets on food
    assistance to Armenia and Lithuania and estimated totals of dried
    fruit exports.

    Timing and luck have kept some of the more eloquent leaders from
    telling their stories. Four early, literary presidents - Thomas
    Jefferson, James Madison and John and John Quincy Adams - never
    published full-length memoirs largely because it was considered in
    poor taste to dwell on one's accomplishments.

    Abraham Lincoln and John Kennedy were assassinated; Franklin
    Roosevelt also died in office and Woodrow Wilson finished his
    presidency in such poor health he never got past the preface of an
    intended book.
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