This story was originally published online with Word In Black, a collaboration of the nation’s leading Black news publishers (of which The Washington Informer is a member).

Percival Everett, the Pulitzer Prizeโ€“winning novelist, believes that book bans and censorship are telltale signs that fascism is on the rise in Donald Trumpโ€™s America. To save democracy, he says, ordinary, everyday citizens must stand and fight back. 

Everettโ€™s recommended acts of resistance? Getting a library card or joining a book club. 

โ€œLibraries are the seat of subversion,โ€ Everett said in an interview with Augustin Trapenard, host of the French TV program La Grande Librairie. โ€œReading is the most subversive thing we can do in any culture.โ€

Reading with others, he said, is even better: โ€œThe second most subversive thing is being a part of a book club.โ€

Trapenard laughed a bit. Everett didnโ€™t crack a smile.

The latest report from PEN America offers an idea why Everett was deadly serious. PEN found that far-right national and local groups โ€œhave played on parentsโ€™ fears and anxieties to exert ideological control over public education.โ€ That includes deciding what students can and canโ€™t read. 

PEN calls it an โ€œEd Scareโ€ โ€” a coordinated, sustained, far-right campaign to censor books, intimidate educators, and block studentsโ€™ exposure to different ideas. 

โ€œDiverse ideas and stories featuring protagonists from historically marginalized identities are often the first topics targeted by censors,โ€ according to PENโ€™s report. That means the first books in the line of fire โ€œexplore themes with race and racism, gender identity and sexuality, or depict sexual violence in their work.โ€ 

The scope is staggering. In the 2024โ€“2025 school year alone, book bans targeted 3,752 unique titles across 87 districts nationwide. Florida led the country with 2,304 bans, enacted when elected officials and activist groups strong-armed teachers, schools, and districts. 

Last year, Everett told the BBC that he hoped โ€œJames โ€ (2024)โ€” his retelling of โ€œHuckleberry Finnโ€ through the eyes of Jim, the enslaved Black man, whom Mark Twain wrote as Huckโ€™s stereotyped sidekick โ€” would be banned, โ€œonly because I like irritating those people who do not think and read.โ€

The book earned him the 2025 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, the National Book Award, and finalist nods for the Booker Prize and the PEN/Faulkner. But Everett knows more than awards are at stake. 

When Trapenard asked about Twainโ€™s use of the N-word more than 200 times โ€” which led it to vanish the original novel from classrooms in the U.S. and abroad โ€” Everett answered that the right to read is โ€” as his character James and real-life enslaved Black people knew too well โ€” about freedom.

โ€œWhen we read, we become critical. Weโ€™re open to ideas. We think,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd thatโ€™s what fascists do not want us to do. This is why fascists rush to burn books, to ban books. Very often, banning books that they donโ€™t even understand.โ€

Language, Everett said, defines the line between freedom and submission. 

โ€œLanguage is our place of safety,โ€ he said. โ€œLanguage is what keeps us free. If we canโ€™t communicate with each other, if we canโ€™t impart ideas, then we might as well give up.โ€

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