Ms. Trump is the daughter of Fred Trump Jr., the president’s older brother, who died in 1981. She has mostly kept out of the public eye, except for a family feud over the will of the Trump family patriarch, Fred Trump Sr., who died in 1999.
Several former White House aides and Trump administration members have written books that have been problematic for the president, including the former F.B.I director James Comey; Andrew G. McCabe, a former deputy F.B.I. director; Cliff Sims, a former Trump aide; and an anonymous official who published a scorching indictment that questioned the president’s fitness for office.
Publishers have made a small fortune from tell-alls and journalistic investigations into the Trump administration. Simon & Schuster has already released a handful of books with damaging information about the president and his family, among them Bob Woodward’s “Fear: Trump in the White House,” which sold more than a million copies in its first week; “Unhinged: An Insider’s Account of the Trump White House,” by Omarosa Manigault Newman, a reality TV star and former Trump adviser; and, recently, “The Art of Her Deal,” an unauthorized biography of Melania Trump by the Washington Post reporter Mary Jordan.
This summer, Simon & Schuster is also publishing a memoir by John Bolton, Mr. Trump’s former national security adviser. The book’s release has been complicated by disputes over what the Trump administration contends is classified information.
The White House is expected to give Mr. Bolton a redacted version of his manuscript by Friday, which would be four days before the book’s current publication date. In his memoir, Mr. Bolton recounts how the president held up security assistance to Ukraine as leverage to get officials there to take up investigations into Democrats, including the Bidens — a scandal that led to the president’s impeachment.