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Missing: The book will raise money to fund
the search for Madeleine McCann |
Madeleine
McCann’s
parents have signed a multi-million pound
book deal to
write about their daughter’s disappearance.
Kate and
Gerry McCann’s
emotional account about their four-year-old
vanishing from a holiday
apartment
is an attempt to raise money
to continue the search for her.
Profits from the book – which is expected to be one of next year’s
best-sellers – will be donated to the family’s official
fund
to find Madeleine.
The book, simply entitled Madeleine, will be published on April 28 next
year to coincide with the fourth anniversary of their daughter’s
disappearance.
It comes as earlier this month they revealed that the dwindling fund
would run out of money by early 2012.
Within weeks of Maddie being snatched from a holiday apartment in
Praia da Luz,
Portugal, in May 2007 money from the public poured in to boost the Find
Madeleine Fund. At its height it stood at £2 million. But now there is
just £300,000 left.
Precise details of the publishing deal have not been released, but a
source said it included a ‘substantial’ advance and included ‘enhanced
royalties’ - giving the couple a bigger share of profits from sales.
Mrs McCann,
42, said: ‘My reason for writing is simple - to give an account of the
truth. ‘Publishing this book has been a very difficult decision and is
one that we have taken after much deliberation and with a very heavy
heart.
‘However, in the last few months, with the depletion of Madeleine’s
Fund, it is a decision that has virtually been taken out of our hands.
‘Every penny we raise through its sales will be spent on our search for
Madeleine. Nothing is more important to us than finding our little
girl.’
Mr McCann, also 42, added: ‘We are hopeful that this book may help the
investigation
to find Madeleine in other ways too.
‘Our hope is that it may prompt those who have relevant information -
knowingly or not - to come forward and share it with our team. Somebody
holds that key piece of the jigsaw.’
Transworld won the rights to publish the book - which is being written
by the McCanns themselves and is currently part-complete - in the UK,
the Commonwealth and Europe.
It is expected to sell thousands of copies due to the overwhelming
interest since her disappearance in April 2007 and be priced at £20.
The publisher is home to best-selling authors including The Da Vinci
Code writer Dan Brown, fantasy novelist Terry Pratchett and theoretical
physicist Stephen Hawking.
Transworld publisher Bill Scott-Kerr said: ‘It is an enormous privilege
to be publishing this book.
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Kate and Gerry McCann confirmed the book will
be published to coincide with the fourth anniversary of
Madeleine's disappearance next April |
‘We are so pleased to be joining Kate and Gerry McCann in the Find
Madeleine campaign.’
Deals for newspaper serialisations and translations of the book are now
expected to be negotiated.
The McCanns, from Rothley, Leicestershire, are fighting a legal battle
against former Portuguese detective
Goncalo
Amaral over his book alleging
that Madeleine died in the apartment and that her parents faked her
abduction - something they strongly deny.
The appeal court in Lisbon last month
overturned an injunction obtained by
the couple banning publication of Mr Amaral’s work, Maddie:
The Truth
Of The Lie.
But a source close to the McCanns said their decision to write their own
book had nothing to do with rebutting Mr Amaral’s allegations.
‘It certainly hasn’t been prompted by him,’ the source said.
Earlier this month, Mrs McCann admitted she ‘had to face up to the fact’
that her missing daughter may never be found.
Mrs McCann also accused the
Government
of giving up the hunt for
the child, who went missing shortly before her
fourth birthday.
She said a series of ministers had shrugged off her pleas for help. ‘I
don’t want to be appeased, and that’s what I feel we’re getting. We need
action, I don’t need fluffy worthless words,’ she said.
The couple have written an open letter begging for political and
financial help and launched an online petition to lobby the British and
Portuguese governments for a formal review of the case.
Portuguese police shelved an 18-month investigation into the
disappearance after clearing her parents as formal suspects, and the
case has remained closed.
Madeleine was four when she vanished from her family’s holiday apartment
in Praia da Luz in the Algarve on May 3, 2007, as her parents
dined
with
friends
nearby. |