Guess what guys, Trump did not write The Art of the Deal either. All those books you own by rwnj politicians that you've thrown your money at? They didn't write those books.
I was in the publishing business for 28 years. Many, many people have books on the market and never wrote a word but they are the author. You go to a publisher with all your information and documents. The publisher will assign you a writer The writer will ask thousands of questions, incorporate your documents and write a book.There's nothing wrong or sneaky about this because only a very small percentage of people have the ability to write.
what's your view of this ??
The Vetting - Exclusive - Obama's Literary Agent in 1991 Booklet ...
www.breitbart.com/.../the-vetting-barack-obama-
literary-
agent-
1991-b...Breitbart News
May 17, 2012 - In fact, Andrew believed, as we do, that President Barack Obama was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, on August 4, 1961. ... Breitbart News has obtained a promotional booklet produced in1991 by Barack Obama’s then-literary agency, Acton & Dystel, which touts Obama as “born in Kenya and ...
johnson is ex breitbart, not a birther.
nyt
Barack Obama, the junior senator from Illinois and the Democratic Party’s new rock star, is that rare politician who can actually write — and write movingly and genuinely about himself.
His 1995 memoir, “Dreams From My Father,” written before Mr. Obama entered politics, provided a revealing, introspective account of his efforts to trace his family’s tangled roots and his attempts to come to terms with his absent father, who left home when he was still a toddler. That book did an evocative job of conjuring the author’s multicultural childhood: his father was from Kenya, his mother was from Kansas, and the young Mr. Obama grew up in Hawaii and Indonesia.
And it was equally candid about his youthful struggles: pot, booze and “maybe a little blow,” he wrote, could “push questions of who I was out of my mind,” flatten “out the landscape of my heart, blur the edges of my memory.” Most memorably, the book gave the reader a heartfelt sense of what it was like to grow up in the 1960’s and 70’s, straddling America’s color lines: the sense of knowing two worlds and belonging to neither, the sense of having to forge an identity of his own.
Mr. Obama’s new book, “The Audacity of Hope” — the phrase comes from his 2004 Democratic Convention keynote address, which made him the party’s rising young hope — is much more of a political document. Portions of the volume read like outtakes from a stump speech, and the bulk of it is devoted to laying out Mr. Obama’s policy positions on a host of issues, from education to health care to the war in Iraq.