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Pat Wagner's avatar

Thank you. Once upon a time it was a point of honor for people who worked in bookstores and libraries to defend books and authors with unpopular views.

I was a consultant to the library world for 40+ years and a contributing editor, reviewer, and columnist for The Bloomsbury Review (TBR) for about 14 years. TBR was an independent book magazine focusing on small, regional, and academic presses in the US and Canada. Also, back in the day, I helped found and manage an independent bookstore in the Midwest before I moved to Denver in 1975. We were proud that we sold books that other bookstores would not have on their shelves, including bilingual children's books, authors representing the gay and lesbian communities at the time as well as self-published books with right- and left-leaning political slants.

I visited libraries and bookstores throughout the United States and worked with state and national professional library and book-related associations. Increasingly, I heard and saw good people, who wanted a better world, advocate for removing books considered unworthy from shelves and to censor their authors. I found it hard to relate to their concerns. I don't think silencing ideas improves the world.

I admit it can be a fuzzy line deciding to not acquire a book because of subjective issues such as "quality" or because a book does not fit the current collection development guidelines versus not agreeing with an author's POV. And I have witnessed my share of clashes between library users and staff over favorite (meaning old) books removed from the shelves to make room for the new. However what you describe, in my opinion, is different and not just about the practicalities of limited shelf space and the changing interests of readers.

Again, thank you.

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Margo Margan's avatar

Thank you, so much, for shedding light on this!

As an author who has been surrounded by a similar culture, it’s frustrated me how the media only reports on right-wing censorship and insists it’s purely a right-wing issue. It does indeed happen on the right, and the left. It happens on all sides.

I’ve started to see shelves in bookstores more frequently highlighting things like “LGBTQ+ fiction” or “Books by X Race,” and I’m not sure how I feel about it. On one hand, if there is interest for those subjects, people should be directed as to where to find them. On the other hand, it’s always made me feel pigeonholed… If they made shelves for “Female Authors,” would I not be allowed on the ordinary shelves? Are stories featuring black people or gay people or trans people or characters from other countries not just human stories like any other? I’m sure every author and reader feels differently, I just hope authors aren’t being forced to pigeonhole themselves unwillingly.

I always felt pressured to represent diversity in my work, and read books solely because the author was a minority (“read a book by an author of color”, no requirements for quality, was actually one of my school assignments!), and started feeling like if I, as a cishet white author, got published… My spot would just be a waste of space among the bookshelf slots that NEEDED to go to minorities… or so I was taught.

I’m committedly anti-censorship now. I believe that if an author wants to write something with a focus on radical social justice beliefs, they can. If a specific book store wants to focus their content on social justice out of their own volition, they can.

But mandating everyone confirm to a single set of beliefs, and even regulating who’s allowed at author events based on factors irrelevant to the event’s purpose that they cannot control? That’s wrong. I’m sorry to hear things have gotten this bad over there, but glad to see you’re speaking up!

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