Updated on Oct. 23, 2024

On Tuesday, the Montgomery County Commission reversed its decision to reclassify Linda Coombs celebrated book, from nonfiction to fiction. 

“This was a mistake from the outset,” the coalition of national and state advocates, library associations, and Penguin Random House said. “We are glad to hear that the Montgomery County Commission recognized the error in moving Linda’s Coombs celebrated text, Colonization and the Wampanoag Story, from nonfiction to fiction in their public library. We are relieved that this book of Indigenous peoples’ reflections and perspectives on European colonialism will be returned to its nonfiction classification where it belongs. What unfolded in this case demonstrates the danger we are seeing again and again when political appointees ignore the expertise of librarians and any care for authors in exerting ideological control over the freedom to read.”

The local resident who raised the initial alarm over the decision by the citizen review committee, Teresa Kenney of Village Books said: “I’m very happy that the commissioners made the right decision to recognize the truth of the Wampanoag people’s experience. We will continue to monitor any changes in the review policy, and I hope we won’t see more of this in our community moving forward.”

Updated on Oct. 17, 2024

Three more organizations, Authors Against Book Bans, American Indian Library Association, and Village Books, have joined PEN America and Penguin Random House and national and Texas freedom to read advocates in raising alarm over the decision by Montgomery County, TX Citizens Review Committee to reclassify Colonization and the Wampanoag Story by Linda Coombs from children’s nonfiction to fiction. The book presents a historic look for young readers at the Indigenous perspective on European colonization.

(NEW YORK)— A coalition of national and Texas freedom to read advocates, joined by publisher Penguin Random House, today called for the reversal of a decision in Montgomery County, TX, to reclassify from juvenile nonfiction to fiction a celebrated book that presents the Indigenous perspective on European colonization.

In a letter, the groups responded to the decision by Montgomery County Citizens Review Committee to reclassify Colonization and the Wampanoag Story by Linda Coombs, saying it “communicates distrust of material that reflects the truths of our American history. It diminishes the legitimacy of Coombs’s perspective as a member of the Wampanoag Tribe and Indigenous educators who recommend its use.”

The groups include Texas Freedom to Read Project, American Indians in Children’s Literature, We Need Diverse Books, Texas Library Association, FReadom Fighters, PEN America, Penguin Random House, National Coalition Against Censorship, Every Library, and the Authors Guild.

“As Texas parents we object to the actions taken by the Montgomery County Citizens Review Committee to reclassify a nonfiction book to fiction. If this decision is allowed to stand, what will stop the elected officials, or their politically appointed surrogates, from reclassifying other nonfiction books that contain perspectives, facts, or ideas they don’t like or disagree with?” said Anne Russey, co-founder of Texas Freedom to Read Project.

Dr. Debbie Reese, founder of American Indians in Children’s Literature, said: “Books like Colonization and the Wampanoag Story are important to Native kids because they affirm our existence as Native people in the present day. But they’re also for non-Native kids, because those kids are being shaped by the information in books. This country is better off if we all know history in a more informed way. To claim this book is fiction dismisses our perspective and history.”

The group also urged the commission to keep books accessible as they undergo review. Kasey Meehan, director, PEN America’s Freedom to Read Program, said: “The restriction of the children’s book and subsequent reclassification is a threat to the freedom to read and essentially eliminates the opportunity for a young reader to discover and learn the true story of the discovery of the Americas through an Indigenous perspective.”

PEN America has been at the forefront of documenting and defending against the unprecedented rise of school book bans nationwide as well as the spread of educational censorship.

About PEN America

PEN America stands at the intersection of literature and human rights to protect free expression in the United States and worldwide. We champion the freedom to write, recognizing the power of the word to transform the world. Our mission is to unite writers and their allies to celebrate creative expression and defend the liberties that make it possible. Learn more at pen.org.

Contacts: Suzanne Trimel, [email protected], (201) 247-5057

Dr. Debbie Reese, American Indians in Children’s Literature, [email protected];

Anne Russey, Texas Freedom to Read Project, [email protected]