SE P II PEN FOR HIRE \A CY'S GHOST After successes like autobiographies of Lee Iacocca, Tip O'Neill and the "Mayflower Madam," writer William Novak makes a dream come true by working on Sharansky's gulag journal and pulls off the "as-told to" coup of the year. The First Lady's memoirs. -4 ■ 1111 ■ 111111M1!• ARTHUR J. MAGIDA Special to The Jewish News nlike some writers, William Novak enjoys sharing by-lines for his books with other people. First came double-billing with Chrysler's Lee Iacocca, then with Massachusett's 'Tip O'Neill and finally with a woman who kept a certain notorious household, "Mayflower Madam" Sydney Barrow, who provided high-priced prostitutes to well-heeled clients. Currently on book stands is yet another book in which Novak had a hand — Fear No Evil, the story of Natan Sharansky's eight years hi the Soviet gulag and his re- union with his wife, Avital. Now comes word from Washington that a new Novak "as-told-to" book is in the works: Nancy Reagan's White House memoirs. The White House announced in early July that the First Lady's recollec- tions, courtesy of Novak, of eight years at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue is expected to come out within a year after the Reagans leave the White House next January. Rumors have been circulating in publish- ing circles for weeks that Novak, probably the best hired pen in the business, was be- ing teamed up with a "very, very promi- nent Washington figure." Before the an- nouncement, several reporters at the Washington Post had been playing guess- ing games about the name of that figure. Most put their money on the President; only one or two guessed his missus. Mrs. Reagan,. Novak and their publisher, Random House, are quite close-mouthed about the book. But Peter Osnos, the Ran- dom House associate publisher who has worked with Novak on his O'Neill and Sharansky books, said, "Bill is first class. 24 FRIDAY, AUGUST.12, 1988- Mrs. Reagan has selected an absolutely superb craftsman, a man who knows how to get the most out of people and make the books they work on their books." One party close to the project said it was "not inconceivable" that the Reagan book would address the most stinging anti- Nancy charges to come out of Washington since she packed her bags to move to the capital: Claims that Mrs. Reagan ruled the White House roost — and her husband's presidency — with astronomical pres- tidigitations. Novak has previously said he would not ghost a book for "anybody whose politics I can't stand." The Nancy Reagan book, he said, perhaps with some sophistry, "doesn't fall into that category. This isn't even a political book. This will be a book about one woman's experience of living in the White House and being married to the President." lb be fair, Novak has rejected some ghosting offers "for political reasons," in- cluding one from "a prominent military figure in Israel." The 10 meetings Novak has had with Mrs. Reagan to date have convinced him that she is not the "dragon lady" of her public image. At their first get-acquainted session, he found her to be "intelligent, forthcoming and real, with a sense of humor. I liked her immediately." The Nancy Reagan book is the latest in a string of high-powered politicos and celebrities whose life stories Novak has ghosted. First, of course, came Motown panjandrum Iacocca, whom Novak found in private to be "not as extroverted as I expected and more soft-spoken." Iacocca's instant success (it hit the best- seller list in one week — and stayed there for a year) put Novak on the literary map. In the four years since Iacocca's publica- tion, Novak has been asked to ghost books by a member of a European royal family, two Fortune 500 executives, several major pop singers, a few madams whose relatives did not come over on the Mayflower, and an almost legendary consumer advocate. Novak turned down each of these. His success has allowed him to pick and choose. With each potential subject, Novak is "looking for someone who's had an in- teresting life and lived a lot of it. With the Mayflower Madam, I made an exception. She's about 35 now and only had a five- year story to tell. Iacocca had a 40-year story; O'Neill had a 50-year story." Novak also looks for "a distinctive voice" — and whether the book "will be commercial. lb some extent, my earnings depend on how well it sells." But he tackled the Sharansky book for other reasons: "I had fantasized about working with Sharansky long before he was released. It was a dream come true for me." Arguing for a cause For years, Novak had a standard answer to a standard question from interviewers: "Whose book do you want to do next?" Beatle Paul McCartney and refusenik Sharansky, came Novak's answer. McCart- ney because "only three people in the world really know what it was like to be one of the Beatles and Paul is the one I would like to work with." And Sharansky "not because I dared to dream about working on his book, because no one even knew whether he would survive his experience '4