The state legislature in Texas passed a bill that will place an expensive burden on the state’s 300 or so small small bookstores. The mandate is not only costly but almost impossible to comply with. The state wants every bookstore to rate every book they sell by its “sexual content” and to refuse to sell books with sexually explicit content to teachers, librarians, and school libraries. In addition, the bookstores are supposed to report whether they have ever in the past sold books with such content to teachers or schools.
Independent bookstores around Texas warn that a bill designed to rid school libraries of sexual content could have unintended consequences that devastate their businesses.
The bill, which received final passage in the Legislature this week and is awaiting Gov. Greg Abbott’s signature, requires booksellers to rate every book they sell to a school, librarian or teacher for use in their classroom. Books can be without a rating, “sexually relevant” or “sexually explicit,” and those with the explicit rating will be banned from schools entirely.
And by April of next year, every bookseller in the state is tasked with submitting to the Texas Education Agency a list of every book they’ve ever sold to a teacher, librarian or school that qualifies for a sexual rating and is in active use. The stores also are required to issue recalls for any sexually explicit books.
Many have expressed concerns that the bill is an effort to restrict books with LGBTQ themes or by Black authors. In addition, throughout the legislative process, independent bookstores repeatedly have warned that the bill misunderstands how book sales to schools work, is unworkable in its current form and could be harmful to small businesses.
“The First Amendment person in me says, ‘Why do we have to mark the books at all? ’ The business person in me says, ‘that’s going to be very hard to administer for the middle vendor,’ which we are,” said Valerie Koehler, owner of Blue Willow Book Shop in Houston.
Owners and employees of bookstores around the state have said they don’t have the staff or expertise to read and rate every single book they are selling to an educator, and they have no records to retroactively rate every book they’ve ever sold to a school. If the TEA finds that bookstores have been incorrectly rating books, they can be banned from doing business with charter schools or school districts, which might make up between 10 percent and a third of their business.
The bill was sponsored by Rep. Jared Patterson, R-Frisco. He dubbed it the Restricting Explicit and Adult-Designated Educational Resources act, or READER Act. The measure was born out of conservative fears in the last few years of sexual content in public schools. Many of the books that were subsequently identified as inappropriate were written for LGBTQ children and teenagers.
Patterson has said the bill was inspired by “Gender Queer,” a coming-of-age graphic novel that explores the author’s gender identity and personal sexuality.
“We’re not talking about a certain type of sexual activity. We’re talking about sexually explicit of any sort. It doesn’t belong in front of the eyes and in the minds of kids,” Sen. Angela Paxton, R-McKinney, said during a Senate debate Tuesday night. Paxton shepherded the measure through that chamber. [Senator Paxton is the wife of State Attorney General Ken Paxton, who was just impeached for multiple financial crimes by the Texas House.]
Paxton said the bill will mostly affect large vendors, as just 50 companies sell most books purchased by Texas public schools, and three giants are responsible for the bulk of titles in campus libraries.
“If vendors want to sell books in Texas, they certainly have a vested interest in making sure it’s done properly,” she added.
But while those large vendors may be able to more easily bear the extra costs associated with this bill if it becomes law, it will be more difficult for the roughly 300 independent bookstores in Texas that have much smaller profit margins overall than the giants.
It’s common for stores to offer discounts for teachers, librarians and schools, which means the margins on those sales are lower.
For example, a librarian might give the store a list of 150 books they want to buy, at an average of 200 pages each. If this bill becomes law, the store will need to pay someone to read and rate each of those books, and run the risk of being punished by the Texas Education Agency if they get it wrong.
This could either make it more expensive for schools to buy books or make such sales infeasible for small bookstores, said Elizabeth Jordan, general manager of Nowhere Bookshop in San Antonio. Her store had a goal of increasing its share of sales to schools to about 15 percent of its total business, she said, but that will no longer be possible.
“If I am selling a book to a school, I will have to have read the whole book to determine if it’s sexually relevant or sexually explicit. And both of those things, I think, are pretty subjective, and I might rate them differently than others might,” she said. “I don’t see why I would put myself at risk to do that. If all the onus is on me, all the liability is on me, and it’s not a job I’m trained to do or my employees are trained to do….
In addition, the bill requires stores to retroactively rate every book they’ve ever sold that is still “in active use by (a) district or school.”
“The way the bill is written right now is that not only can we get in trouble for what we sell to a school, we can get in trouble for something we sold 10 years ago to a school,” Koehler said.

Desantis and Abbott must be reading and rereading the same book–“Mein Kampt” by A. Hitler. This book is a must for all who want to be a true Nazis.
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It’s pretty unreadable. LOL.
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Dictators generally were terrible writers. (For a real hoot, check out Benito Mussolini’s florid, cheezy romance novel about the sexcapades of a man of the cloth, The Cardinal’s Mistress. You can find it online for free. LOL. I would NOT recommend spending money on it.) Interestingly, the world’s dictators have almost all been among the world’s worst writers–Lenin, Stalin, Hitler, Mao, Gaddafi, Komeini, Saddam Hussein, etc. Mussolini was far from the worst. There is a hilarious treatment of this topic of bad writing by dictators by Daniel Kalder that makes for a good read. I recommend it:
I haven’t read DeSatan’s book. These precampaign books are typically ghostwritten anyway–you know, like the books supposedly by the semiliterate buffoon Trump.
Here’s a sample from the vast wasteland of dic-lit (literature by dictators). Saparmurat Niyazov, the president for life of Turkmenistan, made his book on The Soul a required part of the school curriculum, and you had to pass a test on the book to get a driver’s license. LMAO.
Click to access ruh_2.pdf
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cx: Khomeini
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Niyazov, btw, ordered all libraries closed because the only books worth reading were the Quran and his book on the Soul of the Turkman. LOL.
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I’ll be honest. I treasure my Mao’s Little Red Book. Will pass it on with my copy of commemorative magazine of Hitler’s 50th birthday and dvd of racist-tinged Tom and Jerry cartoons. We don’t need to celebrate them, but we always need to be aware of them and what they represented.
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I had one of those, very elegantly printed, with rice paper dividers. It went missing at some point in one of my moves, alas. I used to wave this at my kids and say, “You live in a country where you can own something like this and not have the police batter down your door. That’s important.”
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Now I’m curious who might arguably be considered the best writer among all dictators.
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The best of the terrible lot? That’s a tough one. Hitler is unreadable, imho. The most apt descriptor for his prose, I think: constipated.
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Just bought this book.
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Let me know what you think, Flerp!
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Time to start air-dropping books to Texas.
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This is better.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Cornflakes
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May I use this opportunity to write an obituary for Malvern Books in Austin? Outside of New York, two best book stores I ever found were in Jackson, Mississippi (whodda thunk it?) and Malvern. They opened about 10 years ago off of Guadalupe, the street the border the western side of the University of Texas campus, not far from the In-n-Out Burger. Very enticing. They specialized in fiction in translation, English language fiction from everywhere on the globe, and poetry. A nice, big room with shelves and tables full of curated sections of books. I was lucky to travel there a few times over the past few years and always made a point to start there, get a burger, and walk over to Malvern. I always went in without a plan and knew I’d walk out with at least four books. Plus oodles of presents. It was one of the main reasons I was always excited about visit Austin. I’d even risk setting foot in Texas!
The book advisors/sellers were like those in story books; they seemed to know everything about every book or knew which colleague to ask about it. I would let one one know what I was reading or what interested me then and they always gave me new things. Dasa Drndic (who seemingly wrote novels with me as the reader in mind), John Okada, Yasunari Kawabata, Willem Fredrik Hermans, Muriel Spark (how did I not know about her?), Roberto Bolaño, Miljenko Jergovic, Molly Keane, Ann Quin, Alexander Tisma, and Victor Serge were all new to me before I walked in (plus one of them shamed me into finally reading Wallace Stegner, who has since become one of my favorite American writers). I was always guaranteed 60-90 minutes of discussing books with someone who wanted to discuss books and tell me about what they were reading. And then they’s talk me into stuff I’d never otherwise think about. On my last trip late last year, I learned that it shut down due to the death of the owner/founder plus the pressures of the pandemic. It was like grieving a friend. Book People is still a great stop for books in Austin, but it’s no Malvern!
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What a wonderful book store!
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Perhaps my “favorite” bookstore memory was in Bethesda, MD in 1991. They had the first Border’s book store in the nation and it was a real sensation, huge inventory and inviting spaces to read and think. It was a great place for a young guy looking for a job to hang out on Sundays to read, save money, and occupy time. One time in the history section I became engrossed in a book, standing facing the shelf. After a minute of sensing the person next to me doing the same thing, I looked over and it was Robert Bork. I would soon work for the senator most credited with killing his nomination. And one my jobs was to handle the Thomas nomination. That’s a whole ‘nuther story.
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Insanity times a million.
Will Florida also pass legislation to require Amazon to do the same thing for every book Amazon sells in Florida?
Will Florida’s fundamentalist fascist government also go after Indiebound, the online site that support indie bookstores across the country?
Will Florida go after all the other online book sellers?
Barnes & Noble has 37 brick and mortar bookstores in Florida in addition to their online bookstore. Will B&N be targeted too?
https://www.indiebound.org/
I think the ACLU and other nonprofits that fight what is unconstitutional will be filing more lawsuits in Florida for this latest crap from the Deranged DeSantis regime that wants to turn Florida into another North Korea.
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Oh great analogy.
Florida under DeS =North Korea.
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Heard a great joke recently:
Remember, North Korea is the bad one. South Korea is the good one. Just like the Dakotas.
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https://bookriot.com/illinois-to-become-first-state-to-ban-book-bans/
Thank goodness!
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Can the ban to ban the banning of books be far behind?
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xoxoxoxo
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Does anyone believe the current Supreme Ct will put a stop these kind of laws?
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I predict they will create a situation in which the words they use in their decision condemn bans or call them into question while, simultaneously, providing the latitude for local officials to enforce them as they see fit.
I am reminded of a passage by Kurt Tucholsky in the early 1920s:
“What we collectively call art and culture are not possible without common assumptions. These no longer exist. The foundations waver. It is altogether not common and self-evident to all that highest duty and profit are bound to the Fatherland—rather that is very much in dispute. It is altogether not common that the family is the endpoint of progress and something self-evident—that is very much in dispute. It is altogether not self-evident that capitalism is essential or even profitable—that is very much in dispute. They speak different languages, this Babylonian humanity, and they don’t understand one another. They speak past each other and have less in common than ever.”
This Supreme Court will make the right to have less in common with each other a fundamental one. It suits their agenda. Ron DeSantis’s campaign slogan, “Never Back Down,” is its North Star, decisions will tailored to fit.
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Lo and behold, just found this pertinent example after posting above:
“The version of the bill signed by President Yoweri Museveni doesn’t criminalize those who identify as LGBTQ…”
“But the new law still prescribes the death penalty for “aggravated homosexuality,” which is defined as cases of sexual relations involving people infected with HIV as well as with minors and other categories of vulnerable people. A suspect convicted of “attempted aggravated homosexuality” can be imprisoned for up to 14 years, according to the legislation.”
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/uganda-anti-gay-law_n_647487e9e4b0b4444c7a49b8
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The Nazi system of 1930’s Germany was simpler: Put the offending books in a big pile in the town square and burn them. We have to find ways to fight this American fascism before it destroys us!
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The idea was actually hatched by right wing university students at Humboldt University in Berlin. They intended to do a small, symbolic burning in front of the university entrance. When Goebbels got wind of it, he took over planning and selected May 10, 1993 as the date about 20 or so of these burnings would take place at various universities in Germany (in part to be closer to the fuel supply). The Berlin rally was led by Goebbels, moved directly across the street from the university in the Opernplatz, bordered by the German Opera, St. Hedwig Church, the library of the university’s law school, and the most famous street in Germany, on which was the entrance to the first modern university in the world, the one that created the idea of baccalaureate degrees. Literally surrounded by culture, religion, law, and higher education as passive, friendly witnesses.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Empty_Library
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What a breathtaking memorial, Greg!!!
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Don’t really need translation, pics and sound are enough:
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Thanks. Chilling reminders from one of the great civilizations of human history hijacked by hatred
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Wow. TX GQP trying to wipe out independent booksellers with onerous regulations. As if it weren’t tough enough competing with Amazon. (Is Bezos lobbying tor this?) One more sign that when it comes to commerce, Reps only support BIG biz.
The average independent bookstore employs 5 people, which puts them between the categories of 1-4 and 5-10 employees. Combined, those categories employ 18% of the US workforce. TX is well-represented with 300 indy bookstores: that’s 12% of the national total [TX is 9% of the population]. But I guess in Greg Abbott’s TX, 1500+ employees are just so much liver to be chopped in the interests of owning the libs..
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If those bookstores were to remain open, people might read books. They might learn some history. They might have ideas that aren’t racist white shite Christian nationalist ideology.
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So if bookstores have to refuse to sell to teachers, does that mean that now teachers aren’t allowed to read what they want in their own places on their own time???
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That stood out to me, too, TOW, as well as librarians. No need of lists of banned books if folks are simply not allowed to read at their choosing.
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Barnes&Noble asks me if I’m a teacher in order to give me a discount for educators. If I don’t happen to have my school ID on me, I just pay full price. I don’t have to state my occupation to buy books, and there is no occupation police to keep me honest as a private consumer. For that matter, Joe the Plumber (Remember that guy?) could go to a bookstore, pretend to be a teacher, and buy a bunch of actual porn magazines to make a statement. School ID is easily forged, and for that matter, people only need ID to buy things like alcohol and tobacco. Not firearms, of course. This whole thing is a political stunt that can be loosely enforced at worst. Republicans are boxing their shadows. Stupid.
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First they burn books, then they burn people.
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exactly
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There’s a point in early summer right before the sun comes up. The birds start to sing as if on an invisible cue. The warmth of some of the first hot days still lingers in the soil -finally. The seasons are turning another planetary corner.
I’m listening to the dawn here and it’s a bit unnerving….
Because at this same moment the sun seems to be setting in the United States.
Has the nation finally reached a tipping point? Sure, there have been other huge, disastrous events in recent years. January 6 foremost.
But this Texas Book Purge idea is, well, what more can be said that hasn’t been written (and written so well) above?
It’s these millions of bizarre and un-American indignities inflicted on our daily lives that are PILING UP…. Just one more preposterity
Even if this Texas edict is unenforceable, elected lawmakers have actually voted for it.
It would be easy to laugh at them… bumpkins and rubes, the holier-than-thouers and old school haters etc…
But I always remind myself that the Nazis drew significant power from the misfits, morons and moral poseurs who found a home in their ranks… as well as the everyday “law-and-order” loving middle class, the people right next door.
And there are some very nice people, too, who are either sitting idly by or actually aiding and abetting this huge political sinkhole spreading outwards from places like Florida and Texas….and just down the block. I sometimes talk to the still Trump supporters and I’m, like, what the hell? This is our own invasion of the body snatchers.
It’s like the far right is waging it’s own sort of Cultural Revolution. They’ve become the VERY thing they said they hate…the Red Guards.
I’m going to go sit on the porch and have some coffee….and feel the earth shudder.
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John: your prose here is beautiful and frank. Let us hope for the spring of our political winter to bring warmth to our national soil.
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My lord, John. You can write.
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Thanks.
This whole post is really interesting.
I was reading above, about the crapola produced by dictators….
It reminded me of a great episode of “The Office” from season 2, “Dwight’s Speech”.
Dwight Schrute is faced with giving a speech at a regional convention of paper salespeople. Jim helps him by cobbling together the ranting words of Mussolini, which -after some initial bewilderment in the audience- wins Dwight thunderous applause -even though much of it makes little sense.
The joke backfires on Jim. The salespeople love the cribbed oratory of a two-bit beezlebub -turned treacherous dictator.
Dwight apes the role of strongman leader, including thumping the podium. It works for him. It worked for Trump.
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It’s tough sell, John, when there’s no way to out do the combined hilarity and horror of the original.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GAHg-vnfxyg
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But, then again…
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And while we’re at it…
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Of note, The Publishing Houses could put an end to this. I have no illusions that these profit driven institutions will . They could refuse to sell any books in these states.
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Texas and Florida would probably be fine with that. One has to look long and hard to find a freaking bookstore in Florida.
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I had a similar though. The Publishers might not lose much money.
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All they need in the way of books is a rack at the drugstore with copies of Your Angel Numbers and the picture book called The Faith of Donald Trump.
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The Governor of Illinois’ approach- sign a bill that denies state funding to public libraries that ban books. (Guardian)
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Good for Governor Pritzker. Great for the people of Illinois. Someone who actually represents the people. No surprise he is a Democrat and was elected with 54.9% of the votes.
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Agree
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Flor-uh-duh mom who challenged Gorman’s poem says she “only read parts of the material” because, you know, reading is so hard.
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