Pop singer Pink will give away 2,000 banned books at Miami area concerts
Byย Nicole Chavez, CNN
Pink will give away 2,000 banned books at her South Florida shows this week in partnership with the literary and free expression advocacy group PEN America.
Fans who attend the Miami and Sunrise, Florida, stops of the singer-songwriterโs โTrustfall Tourโ Tuesday and Wednesday will receive a copy of some of the books that have appeared on PEN Americaโs Index of Banned Books.
โIโmย a voracious reader, and Iโmย a mom of two kids who are also voracious readers,โ Pink said during aย livestream on Instagram on Sunday. ย โAnd I canโtย imagine my own parents telling me what my kids can and cannot read, let alone someone elseโs parents, let alone someone else that doesnโtย even have children that are deciding what my children can read.โ
Fans will receive copies of โThe Family Bookโ by Todd Parr, โThe Hill We Climbโ by Amanda Gorman, โBelovedโ by Toni Morrison, or one of the books from the โGirls Who Codeโ series by the nonprofit that shares the same name.
The singer said she decided to join PEN America and local bookstore, Books & Books, to give away books because she wanted to highlight the rising wave of book bans in Florida.
โItโs especially hateful to see authorities take aim at books about race and racism and against LGBTQ authors and those of color. We have made so many strides toward equality in this country and no one should want to see this progress reversed,โ Pink said in a statement shared by PEN America.
Suzanne Nossel, CEO of PEN America, said she was thankful the singer decided to join the cause during the livestream Sunday.
โThis is a wave that is taking over our country, our schools, our libraries. [They] are going after books about children of color, stories of LGBTQ families, books about babies, about animals,โ Nossel said during the stream. โThis is censorship in its purest form. It is meant to suppress narratives that we need here as a pluralistic society and so we have to push back.โ
PEN America says its data showed that Florida had the highest number of book ban cases, more than 1,400, and the largest number of school districts, 33, removing books in the last school year.
