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Barack Obama, Bill Clinton: All The Presidents' Bestsellers

DOUGLASS K. DANIEL   09/ 7/10 12:06 PM ET   AP

Presidentbestseller

WASHINGTON — Already in distinctive company as an American president, George W. Bush seeks to join an even more select group: president and top-selling author.

Since The New York Times began its weekly lists of best-sellers in 1942, only six of the 13 men who have served as the nation's chief executive have placed a book at the top spot for nonfiction, none while president.

Two of them, Dwight D. Eisenhower and Barack Obama, did it before they were in the Oval Office. Two others, Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton, did it after they had returned to private life. John F. Kennedy and Ronald Reagan also reached the height of the best-seller list, albeit posthumously.

Not that the other chief executives didn't try. Richard M. Nixon wrote 12 books, nearly all of them after he resigned as president. Harry Truman, Lyndon B. Johnson, Gerald R. Ford and George H.W. Bush also turned author but never enjoyed the satisfaction that comes with a top seller.

George W. Bush's book, "Decision Points," is set for release this fall by Crown Publishers. It's not an autobiography, Bush says, but an analysis of key moments in his life, from quitting drinking to invading Iraq.

Presidential memoirs bring prestige to their publishers and can draw healthy sales. Yet they are not known for their stylistic prose or for being particularly introspective. Self-serving to a fault, they tend to play down their authors' flaws and failings.

"Memoirs are a running start on legacy spinning," says Douglas Brinkley, a Rice University professor of history and author of the best-seller "The Wilderness Warrior: Theodore Roosevelt and the Crusade for America."

Rather than providing unique insights, memoirs can seem more aimed at protecting a reputation and bolstering fundraising for the presidential library, Brinkley says. "When you start having memoir ginned out by committee," he says, "it loses its intimacy and authenticity."

Franklin D. Roosevelt was president when the Times best-seller list debuted. He and Kennedy died in office, turns of fate that robbed them of an opportunity to look back at their lives and administrations.

Kennedy, though, had already won readers and a Pulitzer Prize for "Profiles in Courage," a 1956 collection of biographical sketches about politicians who took principled if unpopular stands. The book was a best-seller, and its paperback version had sold more than 2.8 million copies before Kennedy was shot on Nov. 22, 1963. Yet the book didn't lead all others until a month after his assassination. A commemorative edition was No. 1 for 12 weeks.

Four years before he was elected in 1952, Eisenhower wrote a critically acclaimed wartime memoir, "Crusade in Europe." The book brought financial security to the career soldier. He sold all rights for $635,000, more than $6 million in today's dollars, to take advantage of a loophole to pay taxes at a 25 percent rate instead of 75 percent. The book was No. 1 for 11 weeks and eventually sold well over 1 million copies.

Upon publication in 1990 of his ghostwritten memoir, "An American Life," Reagan joked, "One of these days I'm going to read it myself." It rose only as far as No. 5. "The Reagan Diaries," edited by Brinkley, led the list for two weeks in 2007, three years after the former president's death.

Carter wrote a wide-ranging biography and later published a detailed account of his childhood, "An Hour Before Daylight: Memories of a Rural Boyhood." It was atop the best-seller list for five weeks in 2001 and one of three finalists for the Pulitzer Prize for biography or autobiography.

A 2005 book by Carter, "Our Endangered Values: America's Moral Crisis," was the best of sellers for four weeks.

The story of a poor Arkansas boy who grew up to be president – one dogged by titillating sex scandals – trumped a meditation on the joys of doing for others.

Clinton's massive autobiography, "My Life," appeared in 2004 as a nearly 1,000-page hardcover – it spent six weeks at No. 1 – and later as a two-volume paperback. He scored another top seller, for one week in 2007, with "Giving: How Each of Us Can Change the World." It clocked in at a comparatively petite 240 pages.

Like Eisenhower and Kennedy, Obama wrote his best-seller, "The Audacity of Hope," before he was president. Appearing in 2006, two years before his election, it was No. 1 for 16 weeks.

Obama will surely join George W. Bush and other ex-presidents in writing about his administration. (Crown has signed Obama for a post-administration nonfiction book.) He's already revisited his childhood, writing "Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance," published in 1995, well before he held any elective office.

That memoir garnered scant notice until Obama became noticed himself. Reprinted in 2007, "Dreams from My Father" has since joined "The Audacity of Hope" as a best-seller. Together, Obama's two books account for 6.6 million copies in print.

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WASHINGTON — Already in distinctive company as an American president, George W. Bush seeks to join an even more select group: president and top-selling author. Since The New York Times began it...
WASHINGTON — Already in distinctive company as an American president, George W. Bush seeks to join an even more select group: president and top-selling author. Since The New York Times began it...
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12:37 PM on 09/09/2010
My Fellow Armenians, This here's President George W. Bush. The Decider, The Uniter, and as that nancy boy Blair called me, The Blighter.
I'm here to tell you all about my new book, where I prove it is possible to have the words 'quit drinking' and 'invade Iraq ' in the same sentence. Speaking of drinking, in my book I open up and expose myself to you all, I talk about the time I was pulled over for IUD, 'bout how I use to do coke before it became illegal.
Heck, read my book and you'll see I'm Once bitten twice died, uh no, once bitten tell no lies, no, you can all bite me.
Now people ask me " George, where did you get the time to write such an eloquent and thought out book?", and I tell'em I used one of those Ghost Writers. I guess a Ghost writer is like a Ghost whisperer except they don't have have huge tatas like that Love Hewwitt girl.
I don't mind as long as it's not one of those Amityville ghost, whoo-ee, those things are scary, I thought we had one at the White House one time, I went in a dark room and saw some red eyes and a deep gravel voice said "GET OUT! " but it turned out to just be Chaney on the can.
Any hoo, read my book and you too can say Mission Accomplished.
08:24 PM on 09/07/2010
The Personal Memoirs of Ulysses S. Grant - great writer, but lousy President.
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Aintlate
01:30 PM on 09/07/2010
Herein lies the problem. It doesn't qualify for the non-fiction category.
01:18 PM on 09/07/2010
That makes Barack Obama and Dwight D. Eisenhower the best of the lot. That is why the unthinking herds, the teabaggers cannot stand him.
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Sir Guy Grand
A little bit of the old pause...
11:52 AM on 09/07/2010
I've read that Ulysses Grant's account of the civil war is extremely good -- but slightly before the NY Times best-seller list.
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c-tom
Badges we don't need no stinking badges
12:20 PM on 09/07/2010
Hemingway's short punchy sentences are prefigured in Grant's memoirs. To me the best part of Grant's book covers his life before the Civil War. For instance his account of crossing the Texas prairie and seeing a herd of wild horses covering the ground from horizon to horizon is unforgettable. Or his courtship described circumspectly and obliquely but still showing a real depth of love. It is hard to reconcile this book with the received historical figure.
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Sir Guy Grand
A little bit of the old pause...
12:42 PM on 09/07/2010
Well, now I've definitely got to add it to my must read list. Thanks.
08:03 AM on 09/09/2010
The back story, that Grant was dying of cancer and writing against time to provide for his wife, makes the book that more impressive. Of course, any experienced writer will tell you that a good editor is worth his weight in gold, and Grant had a pretty fair editor--Mark Twain.

Twain was the publisher-editor of the memoirs, and he gave the Grants an extremely generous royalty deal. The memoirs were a huge bestseller, and Mrs. Grant was able to live comfortably off the proceeds.

John Guare wrote an intriguing, if not entirely successful play, "A Few Stout Individuals," about the relationship between the Grants and Twain, and the general's race against cancer to complete his manuscript.

http://theater.nytimes.com/mem/theater/treview.html?html_title=&tols_title=FEW%20STOUT%20INDIVIDUALS,%20A%20%28PLAY%29&pdate=20020513&byline=By%20BEN%20BRANTLEY&id=1077011432124
02:24 PM on 09/07/2010
Narrative writers today could learn from his style.
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jettymichael
11:49 AM on 09/07/2010
The best of all is Grant.
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jettymichael
11:44 AM on 09/07/2010
Profile of Courage!!
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11:37 AM on 09/07/2010
the scrub story will only hit number one because some outfit like focus on the family, the cato institute or the koch brothers will buy it up artificially inflating it to the top
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11:30 AM on 09/07/2010
President/General Eisenhower was the LAST actual Republican President.

Those who followed were empty suits.
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BobsNotWorking
11:46 AM on 09/07/2010
I've been lamenting this fact and talking Eisenhower up to my friends for months now. It is too bad that such a great and insightful statesman has seemingly been disowned by his party.
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12:00 PM on 09/07/2010
The lurch to the far-right has become so extreme in our country that by today's standards President Eisenhower would be considered a progressive.
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LHoney
REINSTATE GLASS STEAGALL!!!
01:09 PM on 09/08/2010
Actually, the highest honor he could receive from the thugs that call themselves republicans today, is to be disowned by them.
12:04 PM on 09/07/2010
Actually, I would add Nixon to that list. He was out of the tradition of the old Republicans even though he was ethically and morally challenged. He was part of the Eisenhower/Kennedy world and though more conservative than Eisenhower, he would be considered a moderate Republican (if not a liberal turncoat, he created the EPA) today. But you are right, after this period all the Presidents, Republican and Democrat seem like empty suits. The sense of responsibility and national purpose are gone. I locate it to JFK's assassination for Democrats and Nixons resignation for Republicans. Future leaders of both parties looked to the disasters of the past as warnings and drew the lesson that from now on all politics must be defensive. This created the cults of loyalty we have seen in the ideological Republicans and the fear of liberal mandates that we have seen in the gun shy Democrats. We have now had time for this changed politics to completely transform our government into something that our founders, even our fathers, would not recognize. I think it will take the same level of cataclismic act to correct this trend as it did to begin it. So before we see improvement we must pass through another one of those ages where children doubt they will live to 30 and there is rioting in the streets. As much as I dread it each day full of Washington spin makes me say "bring it on."
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12:23 PM on 09/07/2010
Sorry but I disagree with your Nixon and JFK assessments strongly.

Nixon was the first NEOCON President turning the CIA loose on Central and South America, Indonesia and further escalating the Vietnam War. Nixon was a dupe. But a pretty good poker player. He also resigned in disgrace.

John Kennedy wanted to disband the CIA, eliminate the oil depletion allowance and planned to withdraw from Vietnam by 1966.

Imagine what a different world we would live in if there had been no assassination?
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Americulchie
02:37 PM on 09/07/2010
Sir this is one of the most cogent analysis I have ever read.I fan and fave you.
11:16 AM on 09/07/2010
"Memoirs are a running start on legacy spinning,"

Brinkley is one heck of a fine historian and this point is something you will hear when you begin taking upper division history courses in college.

One thing that enables that spinning to happen is the law concerning how long government documents are allowed to remain stashed in the archives before being released to the public. That legislation is mainly devised to protect the reputations of government officials and generally serve very little otherwise of any other purpose.

You think Iraq and Afghanistan are bad? You will be deceased before the real nitty gritty finally comes out about those conflicts. Your grandchildren will find out, if they're lucky.
12:06 PM on 09/07/2010
The way things are going your grandchildren will not know how to read.
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KalNJ
10:36 AM on 09/07/2010
I have mixed feelings about biographies and especially presidential biographies. I love the inside anecdotes, but more often than not these books are there to justify past doings, promote an agenda or simply for self grandstanding.

http://www.ManOfLaBook.com
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Kiernan7
10:30 AM on 09/07/2010
The one missed is Ulysses S. Grant. He wrote it in his last days, finishing it shortly before he died. He wanted it to be financial security for his family, which it was. It was a HUGE hit in its day, and probably dwarfed the memoirs mentioned here. More research?
01:42 PM on 09/07/2010
Well noted. Grant's book is quite good by any standards even for readers like me who have no special interest in the Civil War or the politics of the age that followed. Grant (like Eisenhower) wrote in a remarkable, spare prose style lamentably absent from more recent presidential efforts. In his memoir, Grant made no effort to persuade the reader to share his opinion or even to look past the events as reported for their 'larger significance.' Maybe in Grant's time, it was believed that people who read books were sufficiently intelligent and informed to have their opinions and understanding of the world. Most political autobios today supply just a little bit of gossip and a whole lot of self-justification. As serious literature, they generally fail.
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nubret2008
09:53 AM on 09/07/2010
I still don't understand why Obama didn't go the path of being rich, succesful and without bigger problems instead of running for president of run down nation with ungrateful people.
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FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
11:24 AM on 09/07/2010
He was hired by Wall Street and the Fed.
Now is it clear?
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nubret2008
12:36 PM on 09/07/2010
Sorry but that makes no sense - at least if you're mentally sane...
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09:28 AM on 09/07/2010
I am looking forward to President Obama's book. I hope he does not sugar coat anything. I am sure that all the hate thrown at him is very hurtful for him as well as his family.
09:22 AM on 09/07/2010
I suggest two reasons why Eisenhower's story may have been as popular as it was with the reading public. First, it deals not with politics but with the story of a man who did much to engineer a successful end to a war which had broad, even unwavering, political support, both then and now. Ike was a legitimate war hero and people wanted to read his life story.

Second, although this is only a guess, he probably wrote it himself or at least carried a greater part of the load than the other "writers" mentioned in the piece. As such, the writing was probably more genuine than the work of handlers. Eisenhower, like most military leaders, was also a very organized thinker which permitted him to speak plainly and simply to an audience. I once saw some old TV footage of Eisenhower briefing--not addressing-- the press about the then-recent US incursion into Viet Nam. He stood alone next to map mounted on an easel and explained the situation in classic who, what, when, where and why fashion. It is almost impossible to imagine a president today willing and able to speak simply and directly about an issue.
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NVEd
I love mountains.
09:29 AM on 09/07/2010
President/General Eisenhower was a truly great man. He really cared about his soldiers, when he became President he was devoted to the nation.
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FZliveson
Beating the Conundrum
11:26 AM on 09/07/2010
The last true Republican (except Clinton (:>) )
02:19 PM on 09/07/2010
Ike was also duped into overthrowing the 1st and only democratic government of Iran via 'faulty inteligence'.. and installing a puppet dictator .. (to secure OIL for UK) this act destroyed a then trusted ally and turned them into a ( so far) permanent ememy...and ..is likely the reason for his farewell speech about the persistance of 'mis placed power'..
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jettymichael
11:47 AM on 09/07/2010
The war was worn by the Russians and the reason we defeated the Japanese its because they were boggled with the Chinese so Ike was not a war hero.

Next.
02:29 PM on 09/07/2010
Half truths, however presented, remain as they are.
02:32 PM on 09/07/2010
The Russians won in spite of Stalin, the latest to come out on this is that Stalin really hurt his own cause by purging his own staff of the best military officers because he was paranoid. Stalin lost a million soldiers invading Finland before the war with Germany, he took out his best military leaders and replaced them with party hacks who didn't know what they were doing. (just like what bush did, with his civilian leadership in Iraq).