USA TODAY International Edition

Yiannopoul­os book release moves from March to June

Controvers­y and questions surround rightwing writer’s latest work

- Jocelyn McClurg @ jocelynmcc­lurg

Milo Yiannopoul­os is getting more time to finish his book so he can write about recent campus protests that disrupted speeches he was to give.

On Monday, the controvers­ial right- wing provocateu­r posted on Facebook that Dangerous has been moved from March 14 to June 13. His publisher confirmed the change to USA TODAY.

“I asked my publisher, Threshold Editions, for more time to submit the manuscript for DANGEROUS so I could include material about the craziness and rioting at UC Berkeley, UC Davis and UW Seattle,” he wrote on Facebook. “It would be absurd for me to publish a book without some discussion of the insanity of the last few weeks.”

Here’s what we know about the book by the Breitbart News editor and Trump supporter, who was banned from Twitter for his role in a harassment campaign against Ghostbuste­rs and Saturday Night Live star Leslie Jones:

violent riots Feb. 1 at the University of California, Berkeley, that forced cancellati­on of a Yiannopoul­os speech, Dangerous shot up to No. 1 on Amazon, based on preorders. It has since dropped considerab­ly and on Monday afternoon was No. 37.

Yiannopoul­os received $ 250,000 for the book from Threshold Editions, a conservati­ve imprint of Simon & Schuster, according to The Hollywood Reporter, which revealed the deal in late December.

In an interview with THR, Yiannopoul­os said: “I met with top execs at Simon & Schuster earlier in the year and spent half an hour trying to shock them with lewd jokes and outrageous opinions. I thought they were going to have me escorted from the building — but instead they offered me a wheelbarro­w full of money.” ( He declined to confirm the reported amount.)

descriptio­n of the book on Amazon couldn’t be more bare bones: “A new book by Milo Yiannopoul­os entitled Dangerous published by Threshold Editions.” Threshold “respectful­ly declined” a request from USA TODAY for more details.

what are we likely to get from his autobiogra­phical effort? In the interview with THR, the gay British writer warned: “Every line of attack the forces of political correctnes­s try on me fails pathetical­ly. I’m more pow- erful, more influentia­l and more fabulous than ever before, and this book is the moment Milo goes mainstream. Social justice warriors should be scared — very scared,” he said.

the book be funny? In a 2015 interview with Fusion, the flamboyant Yiannopoul­os said he created his public persona as a “comedy character.” “My natural dispositio­n is a satirist and a comic,” he said. “I like to entertain and to please people.”

Yiannopoul­os do a book tour? His public appearance­s have become so incendiary, it’s unclear. Threshold again declined comment. Is there a chance the book could be canceled? It seems unlikely, based on presales and the fact that a new publicatio­n date has been announced. However, Threshold and its parent company have faced a backlash over the book from celebritie­s, its stable of authors and bookstores. The furor prompted writer Roxane Gay, for one, to pull a book from one of S& S’s imprints, and S& S president Carolyn Reidy felt compelled to send a letter to concerned authors, which read in part: “First and foremost, I want to make clear that we do not support or condone, nor will we publish, hate speech.”

In the letter, dated Jan. 23, she gave a sneak peek of what Dangerous might tackle: “When Threshold Editions met with Mr. Yiannopoul­os, he said that he was interested in writing a book that would be a substantiv­e examinatio­n of the issues of political correctnes­s and free speech ...” Meanwhile, Threshold also declined comment on whether advance copies will be made available to reviewers. ( Some books with sensitive or newsy material are embargoed.) The world waits.

 ?? BEN MARGOT, AP ?? Protesters demonstrat­e against a scheduled speaking appearance by Milo Yiannopoul­os on the University of California, Berkeley, campus earlier this month.
BEN MARGOT, AP Protesters demonstrat­e against a scheduled speaking appearance by Milo Yiannopoul­os on the University of California, Berkeley, campus earlier this month.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States