The Guardian (USA)

Barack Obama to release memoir weeks after US election

- Martin Belam and agencies

The first of two volumes of Barack Obama’s post-presidenti­almemoirs will be published worldwide on 17 November, two weeks after the US election, Penguin Random House has announced.

The publisher described the first volume, which will be issued in 25 languages, as covering the story of “his improbable odyssey from young man searching for his identity to leader of the free world”. It indicated that it would cover his ascendancy to being the first black US president, and his first term in office.

Obama tweeted on Thursday: “There’s no feeling like finishing a book, and I’m proud of this one.”

He said he tried to “provide an honest accounting of my presidency, the forces we grapple with as a nation, and how we can heal our divisions and make democracy work for everybody”.

The 768-page book is the most anticipate­d presidenti­al memoir in living memory, as much for the quality read it promises as for any political gossip or revelation­s about his time in office. Obama has been called the most literary president since Abraham Lincoln and has written two highly praised, bestsellin­g books – Dreams from My Father and The Audacity of Hope. Both have been cited as aiding his presidenti­al run in 2008.

Even with a substantia­l list price of $45 (£35), A Promised Land is virtually guaranteed to sell millions of copies. But it will face challenges far different from most presidenti­al memoirs, and even from former first lady Michelle Obama’s blockbuste­r book, Becoming, which came out two years ago. As a result of the pandemic, the former president will probably be unable to host the same kind of spectacula­r arena tour as Michelle Obama.

The former first couple negotiated a package $65m deal for their memoirs – a figure the publisher appears likely to recoup.

Obama may also find his book coming out at a time when the 3 November election is still undecided and the country is far more preoccupie­d with who the next president will be than with events of the past.

A spokespers­on for Obama said the publicatio­n date was chosen to avoid the possibilit­y that the book would pull attention from the presidenti­al campaign of Joe Biden, Obama’s vice-president. Obama has endorsed Biden and vowed to campaign for him. It was unclear how prominentl­y Biden figures in the memoir.

The first volume of Obama’s postWhite House memoirs concludes with the 2011 killing of Osama bin Laden, according to the publisher. A second volume, with an unannounce­d publicatio­n date, is expected to cover the rest of the Obama presidency and beyond.

Penguin Random House said in the book Obama is “frank about the forces that opposed him at home and abroad, open about how living in the White House affected his wife and daughters, and unafraid to reveal self-doubt and disappoint­ment”.

Obama added: “I hope more than anything that the book inspires young people across the country – and around the globe – to take up the baton, lift up their voices, and play their part in remaking the world for the better.”

Associated Press contribute­d to this report

presidenti­al nominee, is a member of that committee, as are some Republican­s – including Chuck Grassley of Iowa and Mike Lee of Utah – who have supported some efforts to moderate harsh sentencing.

“During normal times, the wonkiness of nominees to the sentencing commission might have allowed the package to move forward,” said David Safavian, general counsel of the American Conservati­ve Union and an advocate of sentencing reform. “But it’s too easy for Democrats to demagogue Henry Hudson.”

Judiciary committee staffers said that one or two of Trump’s picks may get confirmed, but probably not all. Reform advocates say there is not enough time to properly evaluate the candidates, and that any vote on them should wait until next year.

Spokespeop­le for McConnell and for Senator Lindsey Graham, the chair of the judiciary committee, did not respond to requests for comment as to whether there will be a confirmati­on hearing in the coming months.

The sentencing commission has tremendous power over how many Americans are locked up in federal prisons and for how long.

During the Obama administra­tion, the agency voted unanimousl­y that nearly 50,000 federal drug offenders could have their sentences reduced; they got an average of about two years shaved off their time behind bars. The sentencing commission also provides data and recommenda­tions to Congress and the president about crime policy.

But over the past four years, several members of the panel have seen their six-year terms expire. And, as Trump has focused on appointing judges, he had not moved aggressive­ly to fill those openings until the past month.

The process of selecting sentencing commission nominees is heavily influenced by the attorney general’s office. Legal experts see William Barr’s hand in this slate of nominees consisting of

 ?? Photograph: Pari Dukovic/Penguin Random House ?? A detail from the the cover of A Promised Land, which is the first of two volumes. Obama tweeted: ‘There’s no feeling like finishing a book, and I’m proud of this one.’
Photograph: Pari Dukovic/Penguin Random House A detail from the the cover of A Promised Land, which is the first of two volumes. Obama tweeted: ‘There’s no feeling like finishing a book, and I’m proud of this one.’

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