Joe Biden will publish a memoir titled “Promise Me, America” on Nov. 17, addressing his decision to seek a second term, his choice to eventually drop out of the 2024 race, and his record on the economy, according to publisher Little, Brown and Company.
The release date falls two weeks after the November midterm elections, a timing that could complicate Democratic efforts to keep campaign attention on President Donald Trump rather than on Biden’s own legacy. Many Democrats blame Biden’s decision to run for reelection for Trump’s return to the White House, and party leaders have hoped to avoid distractions before votes are cast.
“‘Promise Me, America’ is about the challenges we faced as a nation. It’s about the decisions I made and why I made them,” Biden said in a video statement released Wednesday alongside the announcement. “It’s about why I chose to run for reelection and why I chose to step aside.”
Biden, who turns 84 three days after the book’s publication, worked with a small editorial team on the memoir, a common practice among modern presidents writing about their time in office. Little, Brown did not disclose financial terms for the book, though past presidential memoirs have typically sold for at least seven figures. Every president since Harry Truman has published a book about their White House years, with few exceptions.
The title mirrors Biden’s 2017 memoir, “Promise Me, Dad,” which focused on the death of his son Beau. His earlier books include “Promises to Keep,” published in 2007 to support his first presidential run, a campaign in which Barack Obama won the nomination and picked Biden as his running mate.
A presidency shaped by crisis and questions about his health

Biden took office in January 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic and weeks after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol by Trump supporters trying to block certification of the 2020 election results. His term included the U.S. response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, conflict in the Middle East, and the passage of large infrastructure and economic aid packages.
Much of the public interest in the memoir is likely to center on his health during his final years in office, particularly his performance in the June 2024 debate against Trump that led him to abandon his reelection campaign. Then-Vice President Kamala Harris took his place on the ticket and lost to Trump in November.
Former first lady Jill Biden wrote in her own memoir, “View from the East Wing,” published in June, that her husband appeared so disoriented during the debate that she worried he was having a stroke. She noted that the White House initially attributed his performance to a cold. “The biggest lesson for us, I think, was that if you don’t explain something well enough then the question won’t go away,” she wrote. “There was never a satisfying enough explanation offered for Joe’s debate performance, and a lot of people never got over it.”
Biden was the oldest person to serve as president, and questions about his physical and mental fitness followed him through much of his term. Journalists Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson explored those questions in their 2025 book “Original Sin,” subtitled “President Biden’s Decline, Its Cover-Up, and His Disastrous Choice to Run Again.” That same year, Biden disclosed that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer.
A crowded market for political books

“Promise Me, America” arrives during a slow year for nonfiction sales overall, with few political titles breaking through commercially. Exceptions this year have included Vice President JD Vance’s “Communion” and “Regime Change,” an account of Trump’s second term by New York Times reporters Maggie Haberman and Jonathan Swan.
A spokesperson for Little, Brown said Biden plans to promote the book through a tour and media interviews. In his video statement, Biden addressed his health directly, telling viewers that many people had asked how he was doing.
“I’ve been spending a lot of time with my family. I’m dealing with a cancer diagnosis, been getting treatment, and it’s going really well,” he said. “I want to thank all those who have offered their prayers and support and well-wishes. It’s meant the world to me and to Jill.”
Political stakes for Democrats
The book’s release date puts Biden back in the news cycle just as Democrats look to capitalize on midterm gains and shift attention toward Trump’s second-term record. Party strategists have generally preferred that Biden stay out of the spotlight since leaving office, given how divisive his decision to seek reelection remains within the party.
Biden has largely avoided the public eye since January 2025, making the book tour one of his first extended returns to public commentary on his presidency. How Democratic voters and lawmakers respond to that renewed visibility, so soon after an election in which the party is trying to define itself apart from Biden’s legacy, remains to be seen.
The memoir will likely reopen debate over how Biden and his advisers handled questions about his age and capacity while he was in office, a subject that drew criticism from both parties throughout 2024. Whether “Promise Me, America” offers new detail on those decisions, or on the internal deliberations that led to his withdrawal from the race, is something readers won’t know until the book reaches shelves in November.






























