Penguin Random House, PEN America, authors and parents sue Florida county for removing books on race and LGBTQ themes
- Written by Sarah Mokrzycki, Lecturer, children's literature and creative writing, Victoria University
A new lawsuit against a Florida school board marks a “first-of-its-kind challenge to unlawful censorship”.
On May 17, the world’s largest English-language publisher, Penguin Random House, free-speech organisation PEN America, five authors (including bestselling queer YA author David Levithan) and two parents joined forces.
Their lawsuit claims Florida’s Escambia County School Board has “unlawfully” removed or restricted books about “race, racism and LGBTQ identities”, and those by non-white and/or LGBTQ authors.
“The School District and the School Board have done so based on their disagreement with the ideas expressed in those books,” reads the lawsuit.
It argues the book removals (and/or restricted access to books), against the recommendations of the district review committee charged with evaluating book challenges, violate the First Amendment, which protects freedom of speech. It also argues school officials violated the Equal Protection clause of the 14th amendment.
Nearly 200 books have been targeted in the district in the past year, according to publicly available information. CNN reports that more than half of those titles have been placed under restricted access and require parental permission during the review process, and 16 books have been either removed from all libraries or made only available for certain grades.
The lawsuit asks for books to be returned to school library shelves, “where they belong”.
PEN America CEO Suzanne Nossel says the book removals are “a deliberate attempt to suppress diverse voices”.
A history of underrepresentation
Children’s books about people of colour have historically been disproportionately underrepresented across Western countries, including the UK and Australia.



















