The next big tell-all book about ex-Alaska Guv Sarah Palin drops Tuesday and the hook on “Blind Allegiance to Sarah Palin” is juicy: It is based on Palin’s own words, in the form of thousands of emails she wrote to co-author and longtime former aide Frank Bailey, a self-described Fox News-watching Republican.

“This book is littered with her words — and we took nothing out of context,” co-author Ken Morris, a Marin County resident and self-described progressive, told Comrade Marinucci and I Monday.

“There were so many more shocking revelations that Frank wasn’t comfortable putting in,so we didn’t. He wanted to tell the story about what was wrong as opposed to things about affairs and legitimacies and diet pills. Yes, he wants people to know what kind of person Sarah Palin is like, because that is important,” Morris said.

Morris described Bailey as “a whistle-blower.” And his story is intended to be a warning about unvetted politicians slipping through the process. “I’m really critical of how we’re doing politics now.”

“Sarah Palin becomes sort of symbolic of people like Donald Trump, or of anybody out there who we don’t vet properly,” Morris said. “It’s just a searing indictment of (GOP presidential nominee) John McCain. We leave no doubt that there was zero vetting” of Palin prior to her becoming the Republican VP nominee in 2008.

Based on a leaked early version of the book, Palin’s peeps are already ripping “Blind Allegiance,” telling Politico Monday that it “belongs on the fiction shelf.” They dismissed Bailey as a disgruntled ex-employee.

Morris describes the book as a memoir “with a character arc and a story arc” where Bailey evolves by the end.

What about the ethics of Bailey holding onto 60,000 e-mails? At the least, where’s the omerta here? Alaska’s attorney general is investigating any potential improprieties involving Bailey’s use of the emails.

“All these emails he has were either to him or from him. He didn’t go and hoard all of the government emails,” Morris said, noting that “we probably quoted 1 percent of” Bailey’s cache.

So if this book is a warning flare about a possible Palin presidency, why didn’t Bailey quit-and-tell earlier? Or wave a red flag, say, when Palin was a heartbeat away from replacing a 72-year-old, cancer-survivor like McCain as president?

“All I can tell you is that in life, it’s easy for people to point. He still believed in the dream, by the way. He still believed that God had a plan for them. And he didn’t like what was going on. It bothered him. He lost sleep over it,” Bailey said.

“Why don’t people leave million-dollar-a-year jobs when they see bad behavior?,” said Bailey, who left his Wall Street job in 1993 over such behavior he saw.

Yes, Bailey will make some money from the book, but Morris points out that “We did this for two years with no guarantee we’d finish, with no guarantee we’d have a publisher. We didn’t even go out and get an agent until about a month before we were done.”

Morris, a wealthy former Wall Street executive, is donating all proceeds he makes from the book to two charities: the Global AIDS Interfaith Alliance and First Base Foundation, which serves Bay Area youth.

A couple of tidbits:

The authors allege campaign finance violations involving the Republican Governor’s Association and Palin. Palin’s representatives deny the charge.

* On Palin seeing conspiracies against her everywhere: “She believes that there are these powers of evil that are surrounding her. She believes that her offices are bugged.”

* On Palin’s ability to be a major political player: “This is a woman who was not meant to be on the stage, emotionally, intellectually, work-ethically on many, many levels,” Morris said. “But now that she’s there I don’t think she’s able to get off.”

* On Palin’s vindicative nature, which Morris described as “two eyes for an eye. You don’t just go after someone who you think is slighting you, you trade slight for destruction.”

* In 2006, Palin, now a master of Twitter, didn’t know how to cut-and-paste on Microsoft Word.

* On Palin as a mother: “Let’s just say that Sarah Palin,” Morris said, “to be generous, is single-minded in her ambition.”

* On rumors that Palin was not the mother of her son Trig (and her daughter Bristol was): “She did have Trig,” Morris said. “(Bailey) went to see Trig the morning of his birth.”

Of course, SFGate.com’s Shaky Hand Productions was there to catch the action. Here’s Morris on whether he thinks Palin will run for president: