NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 As she anticipates her estranged uncle's return to the White House, Mary Trump isn't expecting any future book to catch on like such first-term tell-alls as Michael Wolff's million-selling 鈥淔ire and Fury鈥 or her own blockbuster, 鈥淭oo Much and Never Enough.鈥
鈥淲hat else is there to learn?鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd for people who don't know, the books have been written. It's all really out in the open now.鈥
For publishers, Donald Trump's presidential years were a time of extraordinary sales in political books, helped in part by Trump's legal threats and angered tweets. According to Circana, which tracks around 85% of the hardcover and paperback market, the genre's sales nearly doubled from 2015 to 2020, from around 5 million copies to around 10 million.
Besides books by Wolff and Trump, other bestsellers included former FBI Director James Comey's former national security adviser and Bob Woodward's 鈥淔ear.鈥 Meanwhile, sales for dystopian fiction also jumped, led by Margaret Atwood's 鈥淎 Handmaid's Tale,鈥 which was adapted into
But interest has dropped back to 2015 levels since Trump left office, according to Circana, and publishers doubt it will again peak so highly. Readers not only showed little interest in books by or about President Joe Biden and his family 鈥 they even seemed less excited about Trump-related releases. Mary Trump's 鈥淲ho Could Ever Love You鈥 and were both popular this fall, but neither has matched the sales of their books written during the first Trump administration.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been there many times, with all those books,鈥 HarperCollins publisher Jonathan Burnham says of the various Trump tell-alls. He added that he still sees a market for at least some Trump books 鈥 perhaps analyzing the recent election 鈥 because 鈥渢here's a general, serious smart audience, not politically aligned in a hard way,鈥 one that would welcome 鈥渁n intelligent voice.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 like the reboot of any hit TV show,鈥 says Eric Nelson, publisher and vice president of Broadside Books, a conservative imprint of HarperCollins that's released books by Jared Kushner, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Trump Cabinet nominees Pete Hegseth and Sen. Marco Rubio. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e not hoping for ratings like last time, just better ratings than the boring show it鈥檚 replacing.鈥
In the days following Trump's victory, 鈥淭he Handmaid's Tale鈥 and George Orwell's 鈥1984鈥 along with more contemporary works such as Timothy Snyder's 鈥淥n Tyranny," a 2017 bestseller that expanded upon a Facebook post Snyder wrote soon after Trump defeated Hillary Clinton. Books appealing to pro-Trump readers also surged, including those written by Cabinet picks 鈥 and 鈥 and Vice President-elect his 2016 memoir that's sold hundreds of thousands of copies since Trump selected him as his running mate.
“Melania,” came out in October and has been high on bestseller lists for weeks, even as critics found it contained little newsworthy information. According to Circana, it has sold more than 200,000 copies, a figure that does not include books sold directly through her website.
鈥淭he Melania book has done extraordinarily well, better than we thought,鈥 says Barnes & Noble CEO James Daunt. 鈥淎fter Election Day, we sold everything we had of it.鈥
Conservative books have sold steadily over the years, and several publishers 鈥 most recently Hachette Book Group 鈥 have imprints dedicated to those readers. Publishers expect at least some critical books to reach bestseller lists 鈥 if only because of the tradition of the publishing market favoring the party out of power. But the nature of what those books would look like is uncertain. Perhaps a onetime insider will have a falling out with Trump and write a memoir, like Bolton or former Trump attorney Michael Cohen, or maybe some of his planned initiatives, whether mass deportation or the prosecution of his political foes, will lead to investigative works.
A new 鈥淔ire and Fury鈥 is doubtful, with the originally only possible because Wolff enjoyed extraordinary access, spending months around Trump and his White House staff. Members of the president-elect's current team have already issued a statement saying they have refused to speak with Wolff, calling the author a 鈥渒nown peddler of fake news who routinely concocts situations, conversations, and conclusions that never happened.鈥
A publicist for Wolff said he was declining comment.
Woodward, who interviewed Trump at length for the told The Associated Press that he had written so much about Trump and other presidents that he wasn't sure what he'd take on next. He doesn't rule out another Trump book, but that will depend in part on the president-elect, how 鈥渙ut of control he gets,鈥 Woodward said, and how far he is able to go.
鈥淗e wants to be the imperial president, where he gets to decide everything and no one's going to get in his way,鈥 Woodward said. 鈥淗e's run into some brick walls in the past and there may be more brick walls. I don't know what will happen. I'll be watching and doing some reporting, but I'm still undecided.鈥
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5 bestselling Trump-related books, per Circana
1. 鈥淭oo Much and Never Enough,鈥 by Mary Trump: 1,248,212 copies
2. 鈥淔ire and Fury,鈥 by Michael Wolff: 936,116 copies
3. 鈥淔ear,鈥 by Bob Woodward: 872,014 copies
4. 鈥淭he Room Where It Happened,鈥 by John Bolton: 676,010 copies
5. 鈥淩age,鈥 by Bob Woodward: 549,685 copies
These figures represent total sales provided by Circana, which tracks about 85% of the print market and does not include e-book or audiobook sales.