Did George Bush Really Write That Book About His Father? https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father <div class="images-v2-count-1"><div class="content-picture image-v2-number-1" id="image-40323"> <div class="social_icons social-buttons-on-image"> <a href='https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.rallypoint.com%2Fanswers%2Fdid-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father%3Futm_source%3DFacebook%26utm_medium%3Dorganic%26utm_campaign%3DShare%20to%20facebook' target="_blank" class='social-share-button facebook-share-button'><i class="fa fa-facebook-f"></i></a> <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=Did+George+Bush+Really+Write+That+Book+About+His+Father%3F&amp;url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.rallypoint.com%2Fanswers%2Fdid-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father&amp;via=RallyPoint" target="_blank" class="social-share-button twitter-custom-share-button"><i class="fa fa-twitter"></i></a> <a href="mailto:?subject=Check this out on RallyPoint!&body=Hi, I thought you would find this interesting:%0D%0ADid George Bush Really Write That Book About His Father?%0D%0A %0D%0AHere is the link: https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father" target="_blank" class="social-share-button email-share-button"><i class="fa fa-envelope"></i></a> </div> <a class="fancybox" rel="b7acf1b11f3f70ed3ee281163a666149" href="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/040/323/for_gallery_v2/image.jpg"><img src="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/040/323/large_v3/image.jpg" alt="Image" /></a></div></div>People really show their colors when it comes to George W. Bush. Now his writing the book about his father, George H.W. Bush, is being questioned whether Bush Jr. Really did write it.<br /><br />All over the country, newspaper reviewers are wasting space reviewing George Bush&#39;s biography about his father. Whether they pan it or praise it, they&#39;ll say over and over, as Michiko Kakutani recently did in The New York Times, things like &quot;he writes--&quot; or &quot;he says--&quot;<br /><br />Does he?<br /><br />I reviewed for the The Detroit Free Press, The Washington Post, The Jerusalem Report and other print outlets for well over a decade, but I avoided celebrity-authored bios or memoirs for a simple reason. They were almost never written by the &quot;authors,&quot; but compiled from tape recorded interviews, ramblings, or notes and written by a professional ghost writer. I learned this early on in my own publishing career when one writer friend told me she had been asked to do a best selling author&#39;s memoir, and another told me what he was ghosting.<br /><br />In my view, when reviewers pretend that&#39;s not happening, they makes themselves complicit in the fiction that these celebrities have actually written the book that flaunts their name, a book they&#39;ve gotten huge advances for.<br /><br />Bush wrote a book about his father? Have people forgotten what a juvenile attitude this man has about books?<br /><br />Back when he was President, he and his senior advisor Karl Rove acted liked they were in elementary school, competing with each other to see who could read more books per year. Bush won, of course, supposedly reading ninety-five books yearly for three years straight, which is close to what I used to read as a professional reviewer. And of course his consigliere swore that Bush &quot;loves books, learns from them, and is intellectually engaged by them.&quot;<br /><br />Truly engaged readers can&#39;t stop talking about books they enjoy, and sometimes even books they dislike. But given his love of books, it&#39;s strange that nobody ever reported Bush discussing a book with them, anywhere. At meetings of world leaders, the President was widely known to chat only about his colleagues&#39; flights and if they were able to sleep on the plane. He never brought up books that he supposedly had read (like Team of Rivals) when that would have been a perfect opportunity, especially if his favorite topics were supposedly history and biography.<br /><br />So the only proof we had that he was reading steadily was testimony from his personal friend Karl Rove, just as the only proof we have that he wrote this new book is his name on the cover.<br /><br />But the saddest part of the book race Bush ran with his crony was that reading sounded like a real burden, otherwise why compete in the first place, and in such a bizarre way? Rove reported that &quot;We kept track not just of books read, but also the number of pages and later the combined size of each book&#39;s pages--its &#39;Total Lateral Area.&#39; &quot; So the number and size of pages apparently meant as much to Rove and Bush as what was on them. Maybe more?<br /><br />The book in question, 41: A Portrait of My Father, is only 304 pages with the Acknowledgments and Index starting on p. 277. Physically it&#39;s on the smaller side for a political hardcover: 5.8 x 1.1 x 8.5 inches. By their own strange standard, this new book doesn&#39;t score very high, does it?<br /><br />BTW, Michiko Kakutani is one of my least favorite reviewers, and this bit of praise in her review has to be one of the smarmiest things she&#39;s written in a long time:<br /><br />As for Mr. Bush&#39;s descriptions of the West Texas world that greeted him and his parents in the 1950s, they are evocative in a way that attests to his painterly eye. &quot;We lived briefly at a hotel and then moved into a new 847-square-foot house on the outskirts of town,&quot; he recalls. &quot;The neighborhood was called Easter Egg Row, because the developers had chosen vibrant paint colors to help residents tell the houses apart. Our Easter egg at 405 East Maple was bright blue.&quot;<br />Really? That&#39;s what one of the country&#39;s most influential book reviewers calls evocative writing? You have to have a painterly eye to notice the colors of the houses around you? And how is Bush being &quot;evocative&quot; if the image was handed to him by the neighborhood&#39;s actual name? He&#39;s just reporting what was there.<br /><br />A passage like that makes you wonder. Is the reviewer angling for an invitation to a Bush family shindig? Desperate to say something positive? Or just running out of steam? Maybe a bit of all three.... Wed, 13 May 2015 11:51:47 -0400 Did George Bush Really Write That Book About His Father? https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father <div class="images-v2-count-1"><div class="content-picture image-v2-number-1" id="image-40323"> <div class="social_icons social-buttons-on-image"> <a href='https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.rallypoint.com%2Fanswers%2Fdid-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father%3Futm_source%3DFacebook%26utm_medium%3Dorganic%26utm_campaign%3DShare%20to%20facebook' target="_blank" class='social-share-button facebook-share-button'><i class="fa fa-facebook-f"></i></a> <a href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?text=Did+George+Bush+Really+Write+That+Book+About+His+Father%3F&amp;url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.rallypoint.com%2Fanswers%2Fdid-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father&amp;via=RallyPoint" target="_blank" class="social-share-button twitter-custom-share-button"><i class="fa fa-twitter"></i></a> <a href="mailto:?subject=Check this out on RallyPoint!&body=Hi, I thought you would find this interesting:%0D%0ADid George Bush Really Write That Book About His Father?%0D%0A %0D%0AHere is the link: https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father" target="_blank" class="social-share-button email-share-button"><i class="fa fa-envelope"></i></a> </div> <a class="fancybox" rel="6964450bd1fa128e1c10e7758383d9e3" href="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/040/323/for_gallery_v2/image.jpg"><img src="https://d1ndsj6b8hkqu9.cloudfront.net/pictures/images/000/040/323/large_v3/image.jpg" alt="Image" /></a></div></div>People really show their colors when it comes to George W. Bush. Now his writing the book about his father, George H.W. Bush, is being questioned whether Bush Jr. Really did write it.<br /><br />All over the country, newspaper reviewers are wasting space reviewing George Bush&#39;s biography about his father. Whether they pan it or praise it, they&#39;ll say over and over, as Michiko Kakutani recently did in The New York Times, things like &quot;he writes--&quot; or &quot;he says--&quot;<br /><br />Does he?<br /><br />I reviewed for the The Detroit Free Press, The Washington Post, The Jerusalem Report and other print outlets for well over a decade, but I avoided celebrity-authored bios or memoirs for a simple reason. They were almost never written by the &quot;authors,&quot; but compiled from tape recorded interviews, ramblings, or notes and written by a professional ghost writer. I learned this early on in my own publishing career when one writer friend told me she had been asked to do a best selling author&#39;s memoir, and another told me what he was ghosting.<br /><br />In my view, when reviewers pretend that&#39;s not happening, they makes themselves complicit in the fiction that these celebrities have actually written the book that flaunts their name, a book they&#39;ve gotten huge advances for.<br /><br />Bush wrote a book about his father? Have people forgotten what a juvenile attitude this man has about books?<br /><br />Back when he was President, he and his senior advisor Karl Rove acted liked they were in elementary school, competing with each other to see who could read more books per year. Bush won, of course, supposedly reading ninety-five books yearly for three years straight, which is close to what I used to read as a professional reviewer. And of course his consigliere swore that Bush &quot;loves books, learns from them, and is intellectually engaged by them.&quot;<br /><br />Truly engaged readers can&#39;t stop talking about books they enjoy, and sometimes even books they dislike. But given his love of books, it&#39;s strange that nobody ever reported Bush discussing a book with them, anywhere. At meetings of world leaders, the President was widely known to chat only about his colleagues&#39; flights and if they were able to sleep on the plane. He never brought up books that he supposedly had read (like Team of Rivals) when that would have been a perfect opportunity, especially if his favorite topics were supposedly history and biography.<br /><br />So the only proof we had that he was reading steadily was testimony from his personal friend Karl Rove, just as the only proof we have that he wrote this new book is his name on the cover.<br /><br />But the saddest part of the book race Bush ran with his crony was that reading sounded like a real burden, otherwise why compete in the first place, and in such a bizarre way? Rove reported that &quot;We kept track not just of books read, but also the number of pages and later the combined size of each book&#39;s pages--its &#39;Total Lateral Area.&#39; &quot; So the number and size of pages apparently meant as much to Rove and Bush as what was on them. Maybe more?<br /><br />The book in question, 41: A Portrait of My Father, is only 304 pages with the Acknowledgments and Index starting on p. 277. Physically it&#39;s on the smaller side for a political hardcover: 5.8 x 1.1 x 8.5 inches. By their own strange standard, this new book doesn&#39;t score very high, does it?<br /><br />BTW, Michiko Kakutani is one of my least favorite reviewers, and this bit of praise in her review has to be one of the smarmiest things she&#39;s written in a long time:<br /><br />As for Mr. Bush&#39;s descriptions of the West Texas world that greeted him and his parents in the 1950s, they are evocative in a way that attests to his painterly eye. &quot;We lived briefly at a hotel and then moved into a new 847-square-foot house on the outskirts of town,&quot; he recalls. &quot;The neighborhood was called Easter Egg Row, because the developers had chosen vibrant paint colors to help residents tell the houses apart. Our Easter egg at 405 East Maple was bright blue.&quot;<br />Really? That&#39;s what one of the country&#39;s most influential book reviewers calls evocative writing? You have to have a painterly eye to notice the colors of the houses around you? And how is Bush being &quot;evocative&quot; if the image was handed to him by the neighborhood&#39;s actual name? He&#39;s just reporting what was there.<br /><br />A passage like that makes you wonder. Is the reviewer angling for an invitation to a Bush family shindig? Desperate to say something positive? Or just running out of steam? Maybe a bit of all three.... SGT Private RallyPoint Member Wed, 13 May 2015 11:51:47 -0400 2015-05-13T11:51:47-04:00 Response by SFC Joseph James made May 13 at 2015 12:06 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father?n=664461&urlhash=664461 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Ok brother you seem to have a &quot;biased&quot; slant to this article. I&#39;m thinking you don&#39;t like Fmr. President Bush. Is that a fair guess? SFC Joseph James Wed, 13 May 2015 12:06:22 -0400 2015-05-13T12:06:22-04:00 Response by Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS made May 13 at 2015 1:20 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father?n=664669&urlhash=664669 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>I look at it the same way I look at official correspondence.<br /><br />The CO doesn't always write his own memorandums, but he signs them, which means that he agrees with the content, and they carry the full weight of his authority.<br /><br />How is a book any different?<br /><br />"If" the book was ghost-written, and G.W. Bush's name is on the cover, that means he agrees with the content, and has the full force of whatever his name is worth. "If" he wrote it himself, the point is moot. Sgt Aaron Kennedy, MS Wed, 13 May 2015 13:20:12 -0400 2015-05-13T13:20:12-04:00 Response by LTC Stephen C. made May 13 at 2015 2:11 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father?n=664858&urlhash=664858 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div><a class="dark-link bold-link" role="profile-hover" data-qtip-container="body" data-id="520566" data-source-page-controller="question_response_contents" href="/profiles/520566-11b2p-infantryman-airborne">SGT Private RallyPoint Member</a>, this has been going on forever! In 1957, John F. Kennedy won the Pulitzer Prize for the best seller &quot;Profiles in Courage&quot;. He is credited as the author and supervised its final composition, but it&#39;s common knowledge that Theodore Sorensen was the principal writer. If it&#39;s OK for President Kennedy, it&#39;s OK for President Bush as well. LTC Stephen C. Wed, 13 May 2015 14:11:12 -0400 2015-05-13T14:11:12-04:00 Response by SGT Private RallyPoint Member made May 13 at 2015 4:17 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father?n=665190&urlhash=665190 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>This link is from the Washington Post written by Ann Compton<br />Po<a target="_blank" href="http://http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/book-review-41-a-portrait-of-my-father-by-george-w-bush/2014/11/13/961189b4-6a8d-11e4-a31c-77759fc1eacc_story.html">http://http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/book-review-41-a-portrait-of-my-father-by-george-w-bush/2014/11/13/961189b4-6a8d-11e4-a31c-77759fc1eacc_story.html</a> <div class="pta-link-card answers-template-image type-default"> <div class="pta-link-card-picture"> <img src="https://d26horl2n8pviu.cloudfront.net/link_data_pictures/images/000/013/826/qrc/Books_George_W_Bush-073f9-1108.jpg?1443041745"> </div> <div class="pta-link-card-content"> <p class="pta-link-card-title"> <a target="blank" href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/book-review-41-a-portrait-of-my-father-by-george-w-bush/2014/11/13/961189b4-6a8d-11e4-a31c-77759fc1eacc_story.html">Book review: ‘41: A Portrait of My Father’ by George W. Bush</a> </p> <p class="pta-link-card-description">REVIEW | The son writes a loving tribute to the father — and includes a defense of their actions in Iraq.</p> </div> <div class="clearfix"></div> </div> SGT Private RallyPoint Member Wed, 13 May 2015 16:17:10 -0400 2015-05-13T16:17:10-04:00 Response by CW4 Private RallyPoint Member made May 13 at 2015 4:30 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father?n=665240&urlhash=665240 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Does it matter? Many celebrities, politicians, execs, ect. have significant input but use ghost writers. CW4 Private RallyPoint Member Wed, 13 May 2015 16:30:48 -0400 2015-05-13T16:30:48-04:00 Response by 1SG Private RallyPoint Member made Jul 23 at 2015 3:03 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father?n=838234&urlhash=838234 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Regardless of whether he actually did the sitting down and writing of it, doesn't change my perspective of either men. Now I will get the book and read it. I'm betting it will be a good read. 1SG Private RallyPoint Member Thu, 23 Jul 2015 15:03:09 -0400 2015-07-23T15:03:09-04:00 Response by SGT Private RallyPoint Member made Jul 23 at 2015 6:40 PM https://www.rallypoint.com/answers/did-george-bush-really-write-that-book-about-his-father?n=838939&urlhash=838939 <div class="images-v2-count-0"></div>Yes, he did. With a lot of help from family and friends. It took him, I believe, ten years to finish. It's a good read if you like the Bush's. It details how close he and his dad were. My wife read it first and cried once or twice. SGT Private RallyPoint Member Thu, 23 Jul 2015 18:40:00 -0400 2015-07-23T18:40:00-04:00 2015-05-13T11:51:47-04:00