The Daily Telegraph

Fear of cancel culture tore up my children’s book, says Horowitz

- By Anita Singh

ANTHONY HOROWITZ was told to rewrite his latest children’s book and cut jokes because publishers are terrified of cancel culture, he has claimed.

The best-selling author said children’s publishers are “more scared than anybody” of causing offence, and he was given a list of things he “could and couldn’t say” about gender or ethnicity.

He suggested that the industry take inspiratio­n from Ricky Gervais, who has defied the “shrill voices” of Twitter to make jokes about the trans debate.

Horowitz created the Foyle’s War series and has written three James Bond continuati­on novels.

He is also a prolific children’s author, writing the Alex Rider and Diamond Brothers series.

His new Diamond Brothers book, Where Seagulls Dare, is a comical detective adventure aimed at children aged eight and over. Horowitz released it online chapter by chapter during lockdown to keep children entertaine­d, and it will be published in print next month with all proceeds going to charity.

But Horowitz told the Hay Festival: “I’m very, very scared by [cancel] culture. I think what’s happening to writers is extremely dangerous: where certain words are hidden, where certain thoughts are not allowed any more, certain activities, obviously to do with gender or to do with ethnicity.

“And the kickback that comes with these things – I have just suffered, from my last book, notes from my publisher, which absolutely shocked me, about things which I could or couldn’t say.

“Children’s book publishers are more scared than anybody.”

Horowitz said afterwards that he had to do a “fairly extensive” rewrite. He was asked to remove jokes related to “the usual -isms” because the publishers feared some of his jokes “could be misconstru­ed in this present climate”.

He went on: “The stark contrast thrown up by social media, whereby something is either very good or very bad but there’s nothing in between, is leading to a culture of fear.

“That is the bigger problem. It’s not about cancellati­on, it’s not about anger. It is about the fear that all creative people must [feel] if they’re going to write.

“I believe that writers should not be cowed. We should not be made to do things because we’re so scared of starting a storm on Twitter.

“How do we pull back from that? Watch Ricky Gervais, for one. Watch some of the people who are daring, and just realise that all these shrill voices are being amplified by social media, but actually they have nothing to say.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom