Biden Sells Memoir for Roughly $10 Million, Less Than Obama and Clinton
The memoir's publisher, Hachette's Little, Brown & Co., hasn't yet set a publication date.
Biden, who is 82, said at an event earlier this month that he was 'working my tail off' to write a memoir, and indicated that he would focus on the four years he served as president.
Presidents and their spouses routinely shop memoirs after their time at the White House. Such books can provide a major source of income, and help the public figures frame their legacies.
Biden was represented by Creative Artists Agency, which sold Hachette worldwide rights for the book. CAA also represented Biden for his 2017 memoir 'Promise Me, Dad: A Year of Hope, Hardship and Purpose.' The No. 1 bestseller told the story of Biden's relationship with his oldest son, Beau, who died from brain cancer in 2015.
Spokeswomen for Hachette and CAA declined to comment. A representative for Biden declined to comment.
Biden's representatives said in May that the former president had been diagnosed with prostate cancer. The illness was described in a statement from his personal office as a 'more aggressive form of the disease,' but one that 'appears to be hormone-sensitive which allows for effective management.'
Biden's health will likely determine the timeline for completing a manuscript and any book publicity plans.
Biden's lengthy political career includes an eight-year term as vice president during the Obama administration and four years as president between January 2021 and January 2025.
Biden dropped out of the presidential race in late July 2024 in the face of concerns about his age and mental acuity. Some critics have said that timing contributed to Donald Trump's presidential victory over Vice President Kamala Harris, whom Biden endorsed.
Penguin Random House acquired the rights to books by former U.S. President Barack Obama and former first lady Michelle Obama in 2017 for a price that was widely reported at the time as being in the range of $60 million. President Trump didn't publish a memoir after his first term in office. Alfred A. Knopf, which like Penguin Random House is owned by Bertelsmann, paid $15 million for President Bill Clinton's 2004 memoir 'My Life.'
Write to Jeffrey A. Trachtenberg at Jeffrey.Trachtenberg@wsj.com
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Indian Express
11 hours ago
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Amid TIPRA Motha's demand for SIR in Tripura, Congress says tribals will be among worst hit
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First Post
13 hours ago
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First Post
13 hours ago
- First Post
Trump's deep cuts threaten efforts to combat gun violence even as US battles mass shootings
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Columbia, South Carolina Deputy Police Chief Melron Kelly, who was unaware of the letter, told Reuters that CVI programs were relatively new in the city, but as a result, the police began collaborating more with community organizations. Kelly said Columbia's CVI programs focused on preventing retaliatory shootings that can escalate a neighborhood conflict. 'Public safety really starts in the neighborhood before police get involved. CVI work is very important; we've seen a drastic reduction in violent crime post-COVID and shootings are almost at a 10-year low,' Kelly said. Now, organizations are trying to figure out how to keep the doors open now that federal money has run dry. Durell Cowan, executive director of HEAL 901, a community violence prevention nonprofit in Memphis, received a $1.7 million CVI grant in October 2024. Cowan's organization received $150,000 in federal funds since the beginning of the year before his grant was canceled. He's had to dip into his personal savings to keep his 14-person staff on payroll, he said. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Recently, he secured funding from an out-of-state nonprofit as well as a $125,000 emergency grant from the city. Still, he may be forced to conduct layoffs if federal government dollars don't start flowing again. 'We shouldn't be pulling from our own personal finances and life insurance policies to cover the cost of public safety,' he said.