Andrew Laties has lived a remarkable life. He runs Book & Puppet, a local bookstore in Easton, Pennsylvania. He’s run other bookstores before this one, but now that he’s in the Lehigh Valley he started the Easton Book Festival. I’ve blogged about his previous books here and here. In addition to running a bookstore and book festival, he’s also a musician and puppeteer. In the current climate of book banning, things aren’t exactly easy for those who live literature. My wife and I just finished reading his latest book You’re Telling My Kids They Can’t Read this Book? These are the thoughts of a book seller about book banning. Beyond the many other hats he wears, Andrew is also an activist. It makes me tired just thinking about all of this.
I remember when the US government promoted reading. I grew up when we were concerned about Russia and the arms race. I was alive for (but don’t remember) the Cuban Missile Crisis. The response, from both parties, was that Americans needed to be educated. And that meant reading. Reading is fundamental, so the saying went. Since 2016, and especially 2024, we’ve taken a 180. Book banning is in vogue although anyone who reads knows it doesn’t work. Still, those who sell books can either sit back and worry or choose to do something about it. Andrew is one of those who is doing something. Reading is the way we improve human lives. Daily I read about how some people are preferring books “written” by AI—which has never been and never can be human. And right-wingers around the country are carrying out their war on books.
Andrew and I talk about publishing whenever I visit Book & Puppet. His first book got picked up by Seven Stories Press, but he, like the rest of us who have jobs for a living, hasn’t found sympathetic agents or publishers, as he describes in this book. That hasn’t stopped him from writing or from achieving remarkable things. I was fortunate enough to be involved in the first Easton Book Festival, and a few after that. It is wonderful to walk around a town where book events are going on all over the place. Like much that is good, the event took a hit during Covid, but it still goes on. And it does so because of something that reader and writers have: vision. Part memoir and part a call to action, You’re Telling My Kids They Can’t Read this Book? deserves to be widely read.

