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ABFFE
UPDATE
June 23, 2009 Previously
in ABFFE Update
Volume 11,
Number 5
Booksellers Fight Threat of Civil Suit

There is a disturbing new trend in censorship legislation. Bills have
been introduced in Utah and Louisiana this year that give private
citizens the right to sue booksellers and other retailers for committing
an "unfair" trade practice by selling "offensive" material to a minor.
The defendants in these lawsuits would have to hire a lawyer to defend
them and could be forced to pay thousands of dollars if they lost.
Last week, Tom Lowenburg of Octavia Books in New Orleans testified
against Senate Bill 152 during a hearing before the Louisiana House
Commerce Committee. S.B. 152 authorizes civil suits against booksellers
who have been accused of selling any book that depicts nudity to a
minor. The book does not have to meet the legal definitions of
"obscenity" or material "harmful to minors." It can even be a book that
is written for minors. In addition, the bill provides that the attorney
general must send a warning letter to the retailer whenever a complaint
is received alleging that such a sale has occurred. After five
complaints have been received, a private citizen or the attorney general
can sue.
S.B. 152 and other civil liability bills would have a chilling effect on
bookstores, making them a target of harassment by individuals and groups
that want to censor titles that they find offensive. The Louisiana bill
does not give the attorney general any discretion in issuing a warning
letter to the bookstore: if he receives a complaint, he must send the
letter. "This bill would make our job hell," Lowenburg
testified on June 18. "It makes individuals mini-police in enforcing
content."
Click here to
read more.
Booksellers
Buying Reading Glasses to Help ABFFE
Bookseller s
have responded strongly to 2020 Vision's offer to donate $1 for every
pair of reading glasses it sells to independent booksellers. Exhibiting
beside ABFFE during BookExpo America, representatives of the Sarasota,
Florida, company wrote 15 orders and received expressions of interest
from another 40 stores. 2020 Vision will donate $1,500 based on the
orders it has already taken.
ABFFE President, Chris Finan said, 'We were knocked out by the response.
People were crowded around the displays all weekend. It certainly helped
that people loved the glasses and the willingness of 2020 Vision to
exchange designs that don't sell as expected."
A flier about the 2020 Vision offer will be included in the July Red
Box. More information is available
here.
ABFFE Welcomes Becky and Dan to
Board of Directors
ABFFE welcomes
Becky
Anderson and Dan Cullen to the Board of Directors. Becky was elected
to a one-year term as ABFFE's vice president. She is part of the fifth
generation of Andersons at the helm of Anderson's Bookshops in
Naperville, Aurora, and Downers Grove, Illinois. Becky is also the new
vice president of the American Booksellers Association.
Dan, ABA's senior director of editorial content, has been reporting on
First Amendment issues since he joined ABA in 1986. Elected for a
three-year term, he replaces Oren Teicher, ABA's new chief executive.
Wisconsin
Library Board Reaffirms Opposition to Censorship
After months of controversy, the West Bend, Wisconsin, Library Board
has
voted unanimously to maintain the young adult section of the
library "without removing, relocating, labeling, or otherwise
restricting access" to books that have been targeted by a local
censorship group. Half of the library board was dismissed by the
Common Council for refusing to ban the books, which included titles
that mentioned homosexuality. The dismissed members are continuing to
serve while the mayor looks for replacements.

It appears, however, that the controversy will continue. Prior to the
June 2 vote, a representative of the Christian Civil Liberties Union
handed out copies of a legal complaint that elderly library patrons
are suffering mental and emotional damage because of these books are
in the library. Click
here
to view our letter.
In related news from the
Kids' Right to Read
Project, which is jointly sponsored by ABFFE and the National
Coalition Against Censorship, a school district in Vineland, NJ has
replaced a copy of a teen poetry anthology that was destroyed by a
middle school principal. The principal objected to the poem, "Diary of
an Abusive Stepfather" in Paint Me Like I Am (Harper). Click
here to read KRRP's letter to the principal.
There is more good news in Leesburg, Florida, where the library board
voted to retain Gossip Girl (Hachette) by Cecily von Ziegesar
and The Bermudez Triangle (Penguin) by Maureen Johnson after
the books were
challenged by two parents. KRRP's letter can be found
here.
Show Your Support for Freadom!
ABFFE's
popular "freadom" t-shirts, buttons, bookmarks, bumper
stickers and more are available during Banned Books Week and all year round.
To
order online, visit the ABFFE store.
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