The Guardian (USA)

Trump insists he’s writing ‘book of all books’ but big publishers unlikely to touch it

- Martin Pengelly in New York

Donald Trump has insisted he is writing “the book of all books” – even though major figures in US publishing said on Tuesday that no big house is likely to touch a memoir by the 45th president because it might stoke “a staff uprising” and it would be “too hard to get a book that was factually accurate”.

When Trump left the White House in January, the Washington Post said he made 30,573 false or misleading claims while in power. The comments by publishing insiders were reported by Politico.

Former presidents traditiona­lly turn to their memoirs when they leave office after two terms, like Barack Obama, or are kicked out of it after one, like Trump. Ever since the Guardian broke news of Michael Wolff’s first White House tell-all, Fire and Fury, in January 2018, books about Trump and his presidency have proved a goldmine.

In a statement last week, Trump, 75, said he “turned down two book deals, from the most unlikely of publishers”, which he did not name. “I do not want a deal right now,” he said. “I’m writing like crazy anyway, however, and when the time comes, you’ll see the book of all books.”

The New York Times reported that a two-book, seven-figure deal with Simon & Schuster won by Mike Pence was “grating” on Trump. A Trump spokesman denied that. But the former vicepresid­ent’s deal also caused problems for Simon & Schuster, when staff members said the company should not promote bigotry.

Book deals by other rightwinge­rs have run into problems in relation to the deadly attack on the US Capitol on 6 January, in service of Trump’s lie about electoral fraud and attempt to overturn his election defeat.

Simon & Schuster dropped a book on antitrust by the Missouri senator Josh Hawley, who encouraged rioters and objected to electoral college results in Arizona and Pennsylvan­ia. But The Tyranny of Big Tech was picked up by Regnery, a rightwing publisher – and distribute­d by Simon & Schuster.

A Trump memoir could similarly be published outside the mainstream. After all, he has had bestseller­s before – if with the help of ghost writers. Tony Schwartz, who wrote Trump’s 1987 hit The Art of the Deal, now says the book should have been called The Sociopath.

On Tuesday, Politico reported that senior figures at Penguin Random House, Hachette, Harper Collins, Macmillan and Simon & Schuster said they would not touch a Trump book.

“It would be too hard to get a book that was factually accurate, actually,” one was quoted as saying. “That would be the problem. If he can’t even admit that he lost the election, then how do you publish that?”

Another was quoted as saying he was “skeptical” about Trump’s claim to have had two offers, adding: “He’s screwed over so many publishers before he ran for president none of the big five would work with [him] any more.”

Keith Urbahn of Javelin, an agent who has ushered numerous Trump books to market, told the website: “It doesn’t matter what the upside on a Trump book deal is, the headaches the project would bring would far outweigh the potential in the eyes of a major publisher.

“Any editor bold enough to acquire the Trump memoir is looking at a factchecki­ng nightmare, an exodus of other authors and a staff uprising in the unlikely event they strike a deal with the former president.”

In a new statement, Trump insisted that “two of the biggest and most prestigiou­s publishing houses have made very substantia­l offers which I have rejected” – but again did not name them.

“That doesn’t mean I won’t accept them sometime in the future, as I have started writing the book,” he said. “If my book will be the biggest of them all, and with 39 books written or being written about me, does anybody really believe that they are above making a lot of money?

“Some of the biggest sleezebags [sic] on earth run these companies.”

Trump has never been above making a lot of money but his personal worth has plummeted and he faces extensive legal troubles. Reports that post-White House memoirs by Barack and Michelle Obama sold for $65m may also have grated upon him.

California’s crushing drought may have helped to uncover the remains of a plane crash from 56 years ago.

Last week, a local underwater surveying company was testing equipment at Folsom Lake, about 30 miles north-east of Sacramento, when sonar revealed something unexpected. Upon further inspection, workers with Seafloor Systems found the mystery object was an airplane in one of the lake’s deepest points.

“We could see the fuselage here, we could see the right wing. We could see the tail,” Josh Tamplin, the company’s CEO, told KRON-4 TV.

The plane Seafloor technician­s found appeared to resemble the one that was lost, but their imaging didn’t capture an aircraft number or a look inside the cabin, the TV station reports.

While it’s unclear exactly what plane was found, many local news outlets suspect it’s the Piper Comanche 250 that crashed into the water near Folsom Dam on New Year’s Day in 1965 after a midair collision.

So far, only the body of the plane’s pilot has been recovered, CBS Sacramento reports. The plane and its three passengers have long been missing.

This potential discovery of the decades-old wreck was made possible by the historical­ly low water levels in Folsom Lake, which this year received just a pittance of the snowpack that typically flows from the Sierra Nevada.

Previous efforts to locate the missing plane had been unsuccessf­ul. During California’s last drought in 2014, dive teams and a couple with a sonar boat tried taking advantage of historical­ly low water levels on Folsom Lake to look for the wreckage. However, the low lake levels made the water extra silty, complicati­ng the search local TV reported at the time. They found nothing from the crash.

It may turn out that this year’s inadverten­t discovery was more fruitful.

Local sheriff’s offices are expected to meet with Seafloor workers next week to discuss options for retrieving what they found.

Frank Wilcox, whose brother was onboard, looked for the plane and his brother’s body until he died two years ago, according to CBS Sacramento. For the victims’ surviving family members, finding the plane may offer some closure on the tragedy.

“I think it’s amazing that after all this time,” Seafloor’s Tyler Atkinson told KRON-4, “there’s been a lot of research and a lot of effort put into finding this for the family and also to retrieve what no one knew was down there.”

Across California, the climate crisis has caused such severe dryness this year that Governor Gavin Newsom has declared a drought emergency in 41 of the state’s 58 counties, including the three counties that encompass Folsom Lake – Placer, El Dorado and Sacramento.

Earlier this year, much of Folsom Lake’s bed was dry. Docks offered nothing but parched ground for boaters. The lake, which is actually a reservoir on the American River, is at just 35% of its storage capacity and holds less than half of its 15-year average, according to the Bureau of Reclamatio­n.

The desert-like scenes on today’s Folsom Lake shouldn’t come as a surprise, though. The US Drought Monitor lists the area around the Lake as being in extreme or exceptiona­l drought – the monitor’s two driest conditions.

 ?? Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters ?? When Trump left the White House in January, the Washington Post said he made 30,573 false or misleading claims while in power.
Photograph: Kevin Lamarque/Reuters When Trump left the White House in January, the Washington Post said he made 30,573 false or misleading claims while in power.
 ??  ?? A newly revealed piece of land due to receding waters at the drought-stricken Folsom Lake in Granite Bay, California. Photograph: Josh Edelson/AP
A newly revealed piece of land due to receding waters at the drought-stricken Folsom Lake in Granite Bay, California. Photograph: Josh Edelson/AP

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