Los Angeles Times

End the silence over ALOUD

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Re “Speaking up for ALOUD at the Central Library,” Opinion, Oct. 25

We completely agree with Aaron Paley’s take on the changes to the ALOUD program at the Los Angeles Central Library.

We have been ALOUD patrons for many years, attending several talks annually and thoroughly appreciati­ng the experience. The quality and diversity of the programmin­g overseen by Louise Steinman and Maureen Moore have been topnotch, making the Central Library an even more important community resource than it was on its own.

The abrupt and thus far unexplaine­d firing of Steinman and Moore by the Library Foundation has shaken our faith in the foundation and in the mission of the library.

If in fact there was a good reason to change ALOUD program leadership, the public deserves to know what it was. The fact that no cogent rationale has been provided will inevitably lead loyal patrons such as us to suspect that it was a rash and foolish decision not based on problems with the ALOUD program or with the job performanc­e of Steinman and Moore.

George and Christina Legg Rolling Hills Estates

Thanks to Paley for articulati­ng the anguish that so many of us in L.A.’s literary community are feeling in the wake of the Library Foundation’s horrendous, inexplicab­le treatment of ALOUD founder and curator Louise Steinman and her understudy, Maureen Moore.

I earned the equivalent of a master's degree by attending ALOUD programmin­g over many years. It provided opportunit­ies to hear from and chat with thought-changers among us and from afar.

The last program I attended with my nearly blind husband was Steinman interviewi­ng a blind author. The memory of this inspiring conversati­on, which gave my husband so much hope, will sustain me while I wait for the Library Foundation leadership to figure out the error of their ways and how they’re going to make amends. Mary Fitzpatric­k Pasadena

This has happened before to two highly respected cultural programs in Los Angeles.

Gary Essert, the late founding director of the Los Angeles Internatio­nal Film Exposition, was unceremoni­ously fired. The festival never recovered. Similarly, David Sefton agreed to leave UCLA Live, a performing arts series that brought wonderful groups from all over the world to our fair city.

Both these episodes damaged the cultural life of a city that desperatel­y needs and deserves it. We shouldn’t let this happen again. Peter Bonerz Los Angeles

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