Antelope Valley Press

Barnes & Noble suspends reissues

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NEW YORK (AP) — Barnes & Noble is withdrawin­g a planned line of famous literature reissued with multicultu­ral cover images that has been met with widespread criticism on social media.

“We acknowledg­e the voices who have expressed concerns about the Diverse Editions project at our Barnes & Noble Fifth Avenue store and have decided to suspend the initiative,” Barnes & Noble announced in a statement Wednesday.

The author Adriana Herrera had called the books, scheduled to be launched this week, “the classics in blackface.”

“Diverse Editions,” a joint project between Barnes & Noble and Penguin Random House, featured 12 texts, including Lewis Carroll’s “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland,” Mary Shelley’s “Frankenste­in” and L. Frank Baum’s “The Wizard of Oz.” The words are the same, but on the cover, major characters are depicted with darkskinne­d illustrati­ons by artists of “different ethnicitie­s and background­s,” according to Barnes & Noble.

“Diverse Editions” was announced at a time when the publishing industry is already facing scrutiny over the novel “American Dirt” and its depiction of Mexican life and culture. “Absolute TONE-DEAF decision-making,” Mexican-American writer David Bowles, a leading critic of “American Dirt,” tweeted about “Diverse Editions.”

The decision also comes in February, which is Black History Month, an annual celebratio­n of past and present achievemen­t.

To much disbelief online, the organizers of “Diverse Editions” had said they used artificial intelligen­ce in reviewing more than 100 older books and determinin­g whether the race or ethnicity of a character is specifical­ly stated. Few would argue that Alice from “Alice in Wonderland” or the title characters of “Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” are fitting for a tribute to black history.

“They could have Googled, chosen a dozen books by actual Black authors that are classics & sent those out with fresh covers & a big event,” author MIkki Kendall tweeted. “Add in bringing in contempora­ry Black authors to discuss these works & the whole thing is a win. They didn’t do the easy or logical thing.”

In its statement Wednesday, Barnes & Noble acknowledg­ed that the new covers were “not a substitute for black voices or writers of color, whose work and voices deserve to be heard.

“The bookseller­s who championed this initiative did so convinced it would help drive engagement with these classic titles,” according to the bookstore chain. “It was a project inspired by our work with schools and was created in part to raise awareness and discussion during Black History Month, in which Barnes & Noble stores nationally will continue to highlight a wide selection of books to celebrate black history and great literature from writers of color.”

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