San Francisco Chronicle

Slavery book author voiced her concerns

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NEW YORK — The author of a children’s book pulled last month because of its smiling depiction of slaves says she herself objected to the illustrati­ons and had expressed early concerns with the publisher, Scholastic.

In her first interview since Scholastic withdrew “A Birthday Cake for George Washington” less than two weeks after it was published, Ramin Ganeshram also said she and illustrato­r Vanessa Brantley- Newton had little communicat­ion and essentiall­y worked separately.

“The public does not know that the authors ( of picture stories) are not in full control of their books,” she said. “The public feels if you write the book, the book is yours and you make the decisions. But in children’s publishing at least, that is entirely untrue. Authors and illustrato­rs often do not speak, or interact. I never had a conversati­on with Vanessa, just a few tweets.”

The Washington book was published Jan. 5 and set off a wave of criticism from reviewers, and on social media and Amazon. com, where 270 out of 371 reader reviews were one star as of Thursday morning. Scholastic initially defended “A Birthday Cake,” which centers on Washington’s head chef, the slave Hercules. But on Jan. 17, it halted publicatio­n, explaining in a statement that the book “may give a false impression of the reality of the lives of slaves.”

Ganeshram says she was informed of the decision by her editor, Andrea Davis Pinkney.

“And I said to her, ‘ As you know, I have always had issues with these illustrati­ons,’ ” Ganeshram said.

Scholastic spokeswoma­n Kyle Good said that the publisher would have no comment. Brantley-Newton, an awardwinni­ng illustrato­r and author, has not responded to phone and e- mail requests for comment.

Ganeshram said that she and Brantley- Newton have never met.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Scholastic halted publicatio­n of “A Birthday Cake for George Washington,” for giving “a false impression of the reality of the lives of slaves.”
Associated Press Scholastic halted publicatio­n of “A Birthday Cake for George Washington,” for giving “a false impression of the reality of the lives of slaves.”

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