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Bush playing for keeps in California
Where's the beef?
Another Dole bites the dust
Is Hatfield the real McCoy?
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Publisher halts George W. Bush bio | page 1, 2
Former Dallas Times-Herald editor Roy Bode also had no memories of working
with Hatfield. "I don't recall that byline," Bode said in a telephone
interview, adding that the Dallas daily had an extensive bureau system and
used freelancers very rarely. "I do not recall the name James Hatfield," said Lynn Ashby, former editor
of the Houston Post. "We dealt with a whole lot of people over the years
and I can't remember them all." But he added that he had done a
comprehensive search of Post articles from 1985 through 1995, the year the
paper folded, and had not turned up Hatfield's name. Casting further doubts on the author's past, St. Martin's was unable to
present evidence that Hatfield was, in fact, the recipient of what his
biographical materials describe as the "prestigious international Isaac
Asimov Foundation Literary Award for Outstanding Biography." Tracy
Bernstein, the editorial director at Kensington Books who edited several of
Hatfield's previous books -- including his "award-winning" biography of "Star
Trek" star Patrick Stewart -- said she was unaware that Hatfield had won
such an award. Nor had she heard of the award itself. Salon News has been unable to find any record of an Isaac Asimov Foundation or a literary award of that name. Jesse Olsen, an assistant at the Ralph Vicinanza literary agency in New
York, which handles literary rights for Asimov's estate, also said
his agency had never heard of the award. But Bernstein defended Hatfield's past work for his "professionalism." "I found Jim Hatfield to be a tireless worker who I could count on to
always deliver, and in every way an easy author to work with," she told
Salon News in an e-mail interview. "Most of the books we worked on concerned pop-culture trivia, but even those books had a certain amount of 'backstage'
info about the stars, creators or what have you. So those books, as well
as the Patrick Stewart bio, were vetted by our lawyers and anything that
was questioned he had reputable sources for. I thus never had cause to
doubt his professionalism or honesty." Bernstein said Kensington Books ended its relationship with Hatfield when it
turned away from the unauthorized celebrity biographies and unofficial
science-fiction television tie-in books the author favored.
"We declined to do those books anymore because people like George Lucas and
Paramount got very litigious. It's unfortunate. It didn't have anything to
do with his professionalism." The controversy also puts St. Martin's' fact-checking and legal review
process under an intense spotlight. On Monday, Thomas Dunne told Salon News
that the book was carefully fact-checked and scrutinized by lawyers. But
Hatfield only provided his editor, Barry Neville, with the name of one
source regarding the explosive Bush drug allegation. And it was unclear
how thoroughly the publisher investigated Hatfield's credibility. Numerous telephone calls from Salon News to Hatfield, his St. Martin's Press
editor, Neville, and his publisher, Thomas Dunne, went unreturned Tuesday
and Wednesday. Thomas Dunne Books publicist James Brickhouse told Salon News on Tuesday
that Hatfield was unavailable for interviews because "his wife recently
had a child and there are complications." The author had been widely
available to the media on Monday, but stopped returning calls as criticism
of his biography mounted. "We're investigating our author's credibility and
the allegations against him," added Brickhouse. The "Fortunate Son" incident isn't Thomas Dunne's first brush with literary
scandal. The St. Martin's imprint was forced to withdraw a biography of
Third Reich propagandist Joseph Goebbels in 1996 after a storm erupted over
the book, which was written by controversial British historian David
Irving, who has been widely condemned as a Holocaust revisionist. George W. Bush dismissed the book's charges as "ridiculous" on a campaign
stop in Arizona Monday and his father, former President George Bush, issued
a statement Tuesday calling the allegations a "vicious lie." "He has
insulted our son's character and my character, and I resent it. This kind
of nasty, groundless attack is the reason that many good people are
unwilling to enter politics. I am proud that George is willing and strong
enough to take the heat
even in the face of this kind of mindless garbage." "This guy should have stuck with writing science fiction," said Bush
campaign spokeswoman Mindy Tucker Monday. "He's obviously trying to
sell books with something absolutely untrue."
Additional reporting by Fiona Morgan and Anthony York.
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About the writer Table Talk Sound off Related Salon stories Book: Bush was arrested for cocaine in 1972 Texas author J.H. Hatfield claims the Republican front-runner did community service at a Houston center.
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