Lauren Myracle (left) with her fans during a recent book signing for 'Luv Ya Bunches'
Myracle says she’s pleased by Scholastic’s message of tolerance. “I give props galore to the folks at Scholastic Book Fairs. Tolerance and acceptance are pretty awesome messages to send the world.” Parenting blogs, as well as those in the gay and lesbian blogosphere, were up in arms following SLJ’s report last week that Scholastic told Myracle it wouldn’t carry Luv Ya Bunches at its fairs after she refused to alter her plotline by replacing a homosexual couple with a heterosexual couple. And the controversy quickly gained national attention, even prompting Conan O’Brien to poke fun at it during his opening monologue on Tuesday night’s ‘Tonight Show.’ Myracle did make changes to the book’s language, explaining she was comfortable with the trade-off of toning down some language in exchange for making the book accessible to more readers. As a result, Scholastic’s book club division said it would carry the cleaned-up version for sale in its catalog, but the book fair division refused, citing the lesbian parents of one of the main characters, Milla, as the reason. Kids who purchase Scholastic book club's excusive paperback edition, for example, will read Quin saying, “Geez, Milla, you carry around so much junk,” while those who buy the original hardback novel in bookstores will read her saying, “Geez, Milla, you carry around so much crap.” The changes were requested before publication of the hardcover edition on October 1 so that book clubs would have enough time to publish their own exclusive paperback. Books available for sale at middle school fairs in spring 2010 are the sanitized version. While Scholastic says its about-face on the issue was strictly an internal decision, Change.org, a blog network that promotes social change and advocacy, is taking the credit. The organization reports that its members delivered more than 4,000 online petitions urging the company to change its mind about excluding the book from its popular fairs simply because it features two moms raising a child. The petition was launched by Michael Jones, communications director for the Human Rights Program at Harvard Law School.We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
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