The Riverside Press-Enterprise

‘EXPRESSIVE TIMES’

- By Hillel Italie

dystopian “The Handmaid’s Tale” to a manga edition of Shakespear­e’s “Hamlet.” The American Library Associatio­n reported surging levels of attempted bannings, especially books with racial and LGBTQ themes, and widespread harassment of librarians. A prominent advocate for removing books, Moms for Liberty, defines its mission as defending “parental rights at all levels of government.”

In some ways, book publishing is still an outlier from other arts and entertainm­ent industries. Video and music stores are mostly gone, but physical bookstores have endured despite the growing size and power of Amazon. com; The American Booksellin­g Associatio­n, the trade group for independen­t stores, is reporting its highest membership in decades. Publishing also remains highminded compared with music or movies or sports, the kind of industry where executives such as Hachette CEO Michael Pietsch stated, under oath, during the Penguin Random House trial that agents don’t lie to them.

“It would be devastatin­g” if they did, Pietsch told The Associated Press recently. “We have an industry that operates pretty much on trust.”

But otherwise, says Penguin Random House U.S. CEO Madeline Mcintosh, the industry no longer stands apart from larger trends — whether inflation and supply chain delays, or questions about diversity and working conditions. She and others cite the pandemic, the Black Lives Matter movement and social media, along with the emerging influence of younger employees.

“Some of us are sounding like the older generation during the rise of the hippies, where we’re like ‘Kids these days; what on Earth are they up to?’ ” Mcintosh, 53, says. “Given the state of the world today, it’s completely logical that Gen Z is determined to change the status quo. This may be one of those generation­s that leaves a stamp on culture for a long time.”

Karp sees the current moment as a coming of age for Gen Z not just within publishing houses, but on bestseller lists, with Hoover’s “It Starts With Us,” Jennette Mccurdy’s memoir “I’m Glad My Mother Died” and rom-com fiction such as Tessa Bailey’s “Hook, Line and Sinker” among many works benefiting from the enthusiasm of younger readers. Karp, 58, himself knows how generation­s can differ: After Simon & Schuster announced it was publishing former Vice President Mike Pence’s memoir “So Help Me God,” released this fall, younger staff members confronted him during a virtual town hall meeting, objecting to Pence’s service in the Trump administra­tion and his conservati­ve stances on gay rights and other issues. Some were openly unhappy with Karp’s response that Simon & Schuster was committed to publishing a range of political views.

“They wanted to hear answers and they deserved answers,” Karp said recently. “I don’t think there’s anything wrong with questionin­g your work culture.”

Over the past few years, employees have challenged and upended traditions that endured for decades or more, even to the very origins of American book publishing — that a politicall­y liberal culture, committed to the broadening of the public mind, was itself predominan­tly white; that the vitality of publishing’s mission — and the glamour of New York literary culture — compensate­d for low pay (usually under $50,000 for new hires) and long hours that forced some staffers for years to live at home or share apartments with multiple roommates.

“There was an understand­ing that you’ve got to prove your commitment. That if you stick it out, then you’ll see the money. Just get through the first five years,” says Rachel Kambury, 31, a Harpercoll­ins associate editor currently on strike. “I feel now like the lid is off on so many issues that had been prevalent in publishing.”

“I’ve gotten to see a lot of young people in recent years and they have such a different sensibilit­y and vocabulary,” says young adult author Maureen Johnson, 49, whose books include “13 Little Blue Envelopes” and the upcoming “Nine Liars,” part of her “Truly Devious” series.

“I feel like they’re not kidding around. They have a sense of worth of themselves as people and a sense that it doesn’t have to be this way.”

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COURTESY OF AIDEN AVERY
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