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 Prizeโwinning novelist, believes that book bans and censorship are telltale signs that fascism is on the rise in Donald Trumpโs America. To save democracy, he says, ordinary, everyday citizens must stand and fight back.
Everettโs recommended acts of resistance? Getting a library card or joining a book club.
โLibraries are the seat of subversion,โ Everett said in an interview with Augustin Trapenard, host of the French TV program La Grande Librairie. โReading is the most subversive thing we can do in any culture.โ
Reading with others, he said, is even better: โThe second most subversive thing is being a part of a book club.โ
Trapenard laughed a bit. Everett didnโt 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 โhave played on parentsโ fears and anxieties to exert ideological control over public education.โ That includes deciding what students can and canโt read.
PEN calls it an โEd Scareโ โ a coordinated, sustained, far-right campaign to censor books, intimidate educators, and block studentsโ exposure to different ideas.
โDiverse ideas and stories featuring protagonists from historically marginalized identities are often the first topics targeted by censors,โ according to PENโs report. That means the first books in the line of fire โexplore themes with race and racism, gender identity and sexuality, or depict sexual violence in their work.โ
The scope is staggering. In the 2024โ2025 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 โJames โ (2024)โ his retelling of โHuckleberry Finnโ through the eyes of Jim, the enslaved Black man, whom Mark Twain wrote as Huckโs stereotyped sidekick โ would be banned, โonly 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 Twainโs 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.
โWhen we read, we become critical. Weโre open to ideas. We think,โ he said. โAnd thatโs 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 donโt even understand.โ
Language, Everett said, defines the line between freedom and submission.
โLanguage is our place of safety,โ he said. โLanguage is what keeps us free. If we canโt communicate with each other, if we canโt impart ideas, then we might as well give up.โ

