Daily Press (Sunday)

B&N, authors say Virginia Beach book challenges should be dismissed

- By Kelsey Kendall Staff Writer Kelsey Kendall, kelsey.kendall @virginiame­dia.com

VIRGINIA BEACH — Barnes & Noble and authors and publishers of two books being challenged in Virginia Beach Circuit Court are arguing the books are not obscene and that restrictin­g access to them would be a violation of constituti­onal rights.

Their court filings came about a month after Judge Pamela Baskervill found probable cause that “Gender Queer: A Memoir” by Maia Kobabe and “A Court of Mist and Fury” by Sarah J. Maas are “obscene for unrestrict­ed viewing by minors” at the request of Virginia Beach congressio­nal candidate Tommy Altman and his attorney, Del. Tim Anderson.

Motions filed this week on behalf of Maas, Bloomsbury Publishing, Kobabe and Oni-Lion Forge Publishing Group requested that the petition and the show cause order be dismissed.

Barnes & Noble argued that the petition seeking an obscenity ruling for both books is “fatally defective under applicable constituti­onal standards.”

The petition highlights passages and pages from both books. However, according to Barnes & Noble and the authors and publishers, the books taken as a whole do not meet the criteria to be considered obscene under state and constituti­onal law.

Further, the major bookseller argues there is no provision under state law that authorizes the court to issue a ruling that would restrict children from accessing the books while allowing adults unrestrict­ed access.

Besides responding to the allegation­s that the books are obscene, the publishers and authors looked to other legal routes to dismiss Altman’s petition.

Bloomsbury and Maas filed a joint plea noting that because “A Court of Mist and Fury” has been available in this jurisdicti­on since it was published more than six years ago, the petition should be barred. Oni-Lion Forge also included a similar argument in its motion.

In addition, the recent motions argued against Altman’s motion for a temporary restrainin­g order that would prohibit “any person who sells, rents, lends, transports in interstate commerce, commercial­ly distribute­s or exhibits the book, or has the book in his possession.” Oni-Lion Forge stated that there was no “good faith effort to identify ‘all persons’ ” and does not attempt to notify anyone the order might apply to, so restrictin­g the sale of these books violates the bookseller­s’ rights to free speech and due process.

Altman said earlier the goal is to have the books treated like rated-R movies by requiring parental consent to purchase or check out of libraries.

“It’s not about book banning,” he had said. “It’s about restoring parental rights.”

On Friday afternoon, no hearings had been scheduled in the case.

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