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 Fire and Fury or her own blockbuster, Too Much and Never Enough. She questions what more could be revealed, emphasizing that "it's all really out in the open now."
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, thanks in part to Trump's presence and controversial antics.
Mary Trump's recent publication, Who Could Ever Love You, and Woodward's War were popular this fall, but they haven't reached the sales heights of their earlier works from the Trump presidency. The readership seems fatigued with this narrative.
HarperCollins publisher Jonathan Burnham noted that while there is still a market for certain Trump-related books, he believes there is a serious audience interested in analyzing the recent election rather than just more tell-alls.
Collection
[
|
...
]