Jonathan Alter is at work on a biography of Jimmy Carter with the full cooperation of the former president, publisher Simon & Schuster announced Tuesday. Earlier this month, Carter, 90, shared the news that he is undergoing treatment for cancer.
Alter has been working with Carter, his friends and his family since early this year. The book is slated for publication in 2018.
Carter served a single term as president from 1977-1981. After a rousting defeat by Ronald Reagan, Carter returned to Georgia, slowly regrouped and founded the Carter Center, dedicated to alleviating the deprivations of poverty and fostering world peace. For his international diplomacy, Carter was given the Nobel Peace Prize in 2002.
“The record shows that, despite what he calls his ‘involuntary retirement’ in 1980, Carter was a far-sighted president who achieved much more than people realize,” Alter said in a statement. “But his presidency is only part of an epic story that spans three centuries, extending from a rural boyhood not much different than that of the 19th century, to a young adulthood in the vortex of the 20th century civil rights movement, to the frontiers of 21st century peacemaking and disease eradication. This book is warts and all, but will probe the complexities of his stellar and inspiring character, shaped throughout by his religious faith.”
Carter has published 29 books including July’s “A Full Life: Reflections at Ninety,” also published by Simon & Schuster.