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According to Barnett, Bush has not started the book, but "wants to get right to work on this project when she leaves the White House. It is a high priority for her." Bush will have a collaborator -- still to be determined -- to help her meet the 2010 publishing date. Former first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton's memoir "Living History" was released by Simon & Schuster two and a half years after she left the White House, well into her first term as New York senator. Bush co-authored a children's story with daughter Jenna, but she clearly has more experience reading books than writing them. Moldow says that while Bush offered no writing samples, the first lady's in-person speaking style demonstrated "what a distinctive voice she has." It will be the collaborator's job, Moldow says, "to capture that, because I don't think people have heard it as clearly as I did." Moldow says that Bush will help publicize the book. Recent first ladies, including Barbara Bush, have had more dependable appeal with readers than their husbands have had. President George W. Bush said last year that he, too, wants to write a book. Publishers, noting his poor approval ratings, have urged him to wait.
[Associated
Press;
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