It seems a little unfair to the reading public that Paul Keating never wrote his memoirs, while Kevin Andrews has written a 483-page treatise on making marriage work.
Lately just about every politician seems to be writing a book. It’s a case of “apres moi le deluge” after Labor’s six turbulent years in power. If you haven’t read recent works by Bob Carr, Kim Carr and Chris Bowen, you can hold out for upcoming launches of books by Julia Gillard, Wayne Swan, Greg Combet, Peter Garrett, Mark Latham, Gareth Evans … and Crikey has heard whispers that Kevin Rudd has found a publisher.
But pollies beware. The reading public is only so interested in books by parliamentarians, and some of these books are destined for the bargain bin (ping Kim Carr).
As a cautionary tale to wannabe politician-cum-authors, Crikey has talked to publishers and examined sales to work out who should write a book, and who shouldn’t. Firstly, it helps to have been a prime minister with an army of supporters who will buy your book even if they never read it.
The biggest-selling book by a politician is John Howard’s autobiography Lazarus Rising, which sold 100,000 copies. That makes it a mass-market book, as opposed to most non-fiction political books which are niche (there’s a publishing mantra that “only cookbooks sell” when it comes to non-fiction in Australia).
Lazarus Rising also jettisoned the convention that only books by Labor politicians sell. While Labor politicians write more books than Coalition types, the latter usually sell better. (There’s a list of some of the more memorable books by politicians further down in Crikey today.)
Howard is working on a second book due out in October, a biography of the Robert Menzies era. Shona Martyn, publishing director of HarperCollins Australia, described The Menzies Era as a big solid hardback. “It’s not just a ‘ra ra everything Menzies ever did was good’ piece,” she told Crikey, although she noted Howard wanted to balance political history written by the Left.
Other PMs have also succeeded. Bob Hawke’s memoirs sold very well. Big things are expected from Julia Gillard’s My Story, due in October from Random House. Crikey hears it’s quite a read at 170,000 words. Some publishing insiders think it may sell almost as well as Lazarus. (It would want to, given rumours Gillard’s advance was between $400,000 and $600,000.)
Then there are big-sellers by non-PMs — the juicy Latham Diaries, in which former Labor leader Mark Latham spilled the dirt on how politics really works (and his Labor colleagues), sold 55,000. Peter Costello’s memoirs sold 42,000, while Tony Abbott’s Battlelines shifted a respectable 20,000 copies.
Are there more best-sellers in the works? Crikey has heard a rumour that Peter Garrett scored a $300,000+ advance for his book, due out from Allen and Unwin next year.
Wayne Swan’s book is out next month, also via Allen and Unwin. The Good Fight: six years, two prime ministers and staring down the great recession looks at how Australia coped with the GFC, plus Swan’s take on the Rudd/ Gillard ructions.
“You can either suck up the system and get a few little sinecures, or you can put it all down there in honest format and see how you go” — Mark Latham
Greg Combet’s memoir, The Fights of My Life, comes out in late July, commissioned by Louise Adler from Melbourne University Publishing (MUP). Adler says it focusses on his time pre-politics, as a union leader etc, although it includes his parliamentary career. While Combet writes on the Rudd/ Gillard fuss, he’s trying to lift politics and Labor culture in the book, Adler says.
But the reality is most books by politicians do not sell well.
Liberal frontbencher Kevin Andrews’ marriage tract is called Maybe ‘I do’, but it turned out the readers didn’t. Liberal Senator Cory Bernardi has written several books. New balance-of-power Senator Bob Day has a self-help business book out next month via boutique Catholic publisher Connor Court. Kim Carr’s A Letter To Generation Next has sold fewer than 500 copies. Chris Bowen’s Hearts and Minds has sold 700. These books are in the bargain bin or on special online.
“Only a small number of them will succeed,” said Richard Walsh, consultant publisher at Allen and Unwin. “People no longer find politicians very interesting people.”
Walsh said readers might buy a book by a person they strongly support, to “join their club” and make a statement, so Gillard’s book should sell well. Books in which a pollie “shat on the political process” (like Latham and, to an extent, Bob Carr) were also attractive. An author had to write a good and honest story, with a voice of their own and human interest and drama thrown in. If it comes across as party PR, readers would not buy it, Walsh says.
Shona Martyn from HarperCollins explained Howard’s Lazarus-selling strategy to Crikey. Howard treated it like an election campaign and went to many book-related events, leaving signed copies in his wake. If he visited a regional airport, the bookshop would announce over the PA that he was signing copies. Howard kept in weekly contact with his publisher about sales, and if they dropped it was addressed. “Basically he worked it,” Martyn said.
Martyn added that people wanted to buy books by politicians they “actually cared about”, or who were provocative. Writing to cement one’s place in political history was less interesting.
While some other publishers grumble about MUP’s strategy of publishing more obscure works by politicians like Kim Carr and Bowen (it’s subsidised by Melbourne University so can afford to), CEO Adler is unapologetic. She says the field is “endlessly fascinating” and can’t be too crowded.
“I’ll do books that I know have modest expectations because I think they add to the debate about politics,” she told Crikey. (And MUP has published some big-selling titles too.)
Adler said the public read “with relish” ripping yarns from “the problem offspring” of politics like Latham. But politicians who wrote sober tomes on their reform agendas could sell too (like Costello).
Latham has an explanation for the paradox mentioned above, that Labor politicians write more books but Liberal authors sell better.
“Conservatives have got nothing else to read. In the last 20 years there’s only been three books — its not exactly a competitive market,” he told Crikey.
“On the Labor side we all flood the market. The literate Labor side is up and running.”
Latham’s ninth book, The Political Bubble: why Australians distrust politics, examines the loss of faith in democracy and “the feral right-wing element in Australian politics”. It’s out in late July from Pan Macmillan.
The author said there was a resurgence of books by politicians because fewer journalists were writing them, and because politicians wanted to set out their ideas in a coherent, long-form format, away from the 24 hour news cycle. Latham welcomed the trend, although he criticised “those self-serving, ‘I was wonderful’ type books in memoir format … I think we can safely predict Kevin [Rudd] will go into the self-serving category”.
Latham said some politician-authors wanted to get on government boards or be ambassadors, “so they don’t want to tell too much of the truth, do they … unlike The Latham Diaries, which guarantee I will never be an ambassador or on a board”.
“You can either suck up the system and get a few little sinecures, or you can put it all down there in honest format and see how you go,” Latham observed.
He was unexcited about Howard’s book on Menzies; “I’ll wait for the movie version of that, it’ll be a real blockbuster.”
Crikey is committed to hosting lively discussions. Help us keep the conversation useful, interesting and welcoming. We aim to publish comments quickly in the interest of promoting robust conversation, but we’re a small team and we deploy filters to protect against legal risk. Occasionally your comment may be held up while we review, but we’re working as fast as we can to keep the conversation rolling.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please subscribe to leave a comment.
The Crikey comment section is members-only content. Please login to leave a comment.