The Guardian (USA)

Open letter calls for publishing boycott of Trump administra­tion memoirs

- Alison Flood

Five-hundred American authors and literary profession­als have signed a letter calling on US publishers not to sign book deals with members of the Trump administra­tion, saying “those who enabled, promulgate­d, and covered up crimes against the American people should not be enriched through the coffers of publishing”.

Put together by the author Barry Lyga, the letter, which is continuing to add names, has been signed by bestsellin­g writers including Celeste Ng, author of Little Fires Everywhere, Holly Black and Star Wars author Chuck Wendig. Titled “no book deals for traitors”, it opens by stating that the US “is where it is in part because publishing has chased the money and notoriety of some pretty sketchy people, and has granted those same people both the imprimatur of respectabi­lity and a lot of money through sweetheart book deals”.

Lyga told Publishers Weekly: “Traditiona­lly, members of an outgoing administra­tion can – and do – rely on the cushion of a fat book contract with a healthy advance. In the case of the Trump administra­tion and its history of outrages, lies, and incitement to insurrecti­on, we cannot allow this to stand.

No one should be enriched for their contributi­on to evil.”

Endorsed by a range of editors, authors, bookseller­s and publishing staff, the letter goes on to state that “no participan­t in an administra­tion that caged children, performed involuntar­y surgeries on captive women, and scoffed at science as millions were infected with a deadly virus should be enriched by the almost rote largesse of a big book deal”, and that “no one who incited, suborned, instigated or otherwise supported the 6 January 2021 coup attempt should have their philosophi­es remunerate­d and disseminat­ed through our beloved publishing houses”.

In November, the Rupert Murdochown­ed tabloid the New York Post claimed that Trump was “being bombarded with book and TV deals that could be worth a staggering $100m”, although his son, Donald Trump Jr, chose to self-publish his most recent tome.

Lyga’s letter comes in the same week that rightwing Missouri senator Josh Hawley was forced to find a new publisher for his book The Tyranny of Big Tech, after it was dropped by Simon & Schuster over his backing of baseless claims that the election was stolen. America’s National Coalition Against Censorship has spoken out against the cancellati­on of Hawley’s deal, saying that while it shares “the outrage of our fellow citizens” over the attack on the US Capitol, it was deeply concerned

about Simon & Schuster’s decision to drop the book.

“Cancelling the book weakens free expression … It is crucial that publishers stand by their decision to publish, even when they strongly disagree with something the author has said,” said the free speech organsiati­on. “Cancelling a book encourages those who seek to silence their critics, producing more pressure on publishers, which will lead to more cancellati­ons. The best defence for democracy is a strong commitment to free expression.”

The debate comes in the midst of a reckoning for big publishers about the titles they release. In November, staff at Penguin Random House Canada protested over the press’s decision to publish a new book from Canadian psychologi­st Jordan Peterson, the selfstyled “professor against political correctnes­s”. Hachette dropped Woody Allen’s memoir last year after a staff walkout, and Hachette imprint Little, Brown in the UK cancelled a contract with Julie Burchill to publish Welcome to the Woke Trials after it said she “crossed a line” with her comments about Islam on Twitter to the journalist Ash Sarkar.

Tony Schwartz, who ghostwrote Donald Trump’s 1987 memoir The Art of the Deal, was given the nickname Dr Frankenste­in by his former editor for the gloss his book brought to the man who would become president. Schwartz spoke out about how “staggering­ly dangerous” he felt a Trump presidency would be in 2016, saying: “Oh my god, I’ve contribute­d to creating the public image of the man who is sociopathi­c and people don’t realise it.”

Lyga’s letter points to Son of Sam laws, which prevent criminals from benefiting financiall­y by writing about their crimes. “In that spirit, those who enabled, promulgate­d, and covered up crimes against the American people should not be enriched through the coffers of publishing,” say the publishing profession­als, adding: “We believe in the power of words and we are tired of the industry we love enriching the monsters among us, and we will do whatever is in our power to stop it.”

Lyga told the LA Times that each signatory to his letter “will act to the dictates of their conscience and to the extent they are able to effect change”, pointing to the Hachette walkout which led to the cancellati­on of the Allen memoir. “We are committing to doing what we individual­ly can when and if the time comes,” he added.

“To those who believe this is censorship, I can say only this,” he wrote on Twitter. “If the first amendment guarantees book deals, then there are some publishers who turned down books of mine in the past who now owe me money.”

 ?? Photograph: Tom Brenner/Reuters ?? ‘Publishing has chased the money and notoriety of some pretty sketchy people’ … Donald Trump.
Photograph: Tom Brenner/Reuters ‘Publishing has chased the money and notoriety of some pretty sketchy people’ … Donald Trump.

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