Critically acclaimed horror author Stephen King has reacted passionately after finding out Florida banned 23 of his books from school libraries.
In 2022, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis signed legislation in the state banning books in schools that included any kind of sexually explicit material. The decision was driven by complaints from groups like Moms for Liberty. Republicans, including DeSantis, have said the legislation prevents students from obtaining books that are not age-appropriate, but critics view the law as an attempt to stifle discussion about issues including race and the LGBTQ+ community in public schools, raising concerns that this law may censor many topics.
Now after allegedly hundreds of titles were banned from school libraries, six major book publishers have sued the state of Florida. The lawsuit was filed on Thursday by Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster, Hachette Book Group, HarperCollins Publishers, Macmillan Publishers and Sourcebooks and argues that Florida’s law violates First Amendment rights to free speech.
King is no stranger to sharing his social and political opinions on social media and on Saturday, he responded after finding his books have been included in the ban, with his name also being mentioned in the lawsuit.
“Florida has banned 23 pf [sic] my books. What the f***?” the author wrote on X, formerly Twitter. At the time of writing, his post had been viewed 12.5 million times.
King expanded on his thoughts in a statement shared with Newsweek, saying: “I have said it before, and will say it again: When books are banned from school libraries, run to your public library, or the nearest bookstore, and read what it is your elders don’t want you to know.”
“If this is the Collier County Public Schools ban then apparently they’ve banned Updike, Hemingway, Vonnegut, Neil Gaiman, Arthur C. Clarke, and novels likes [sic] Catch-22 and Brave New World. You’re in great company, Mr King,” said another.
“We’re working on taking back Florida and making sure they keep their bans off our bodies AND our books!” wrote Barbie Harden Hall, a Democratic nominee for U.S. Congress.
However, others have supported King’s books being banned, with one person writing: “Babe, elementary school kids don’t need to be reading The Shining. It’s not personal. It’s parenting.”