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Screening the First Amendment: ABFFE Debuts Bookstore Videos at Luncheon
May 31, 2007

ABFFE President Chris Finan addresses booksellers at the Thursday lunch
focusing on First Amendment issues.
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Oren Teicher, ABA COO -- and the founding president of the American Booksellers
Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE) -- welcomed booksellers to Thursday's
ABFFE Lunch by advising the audience not to take freedom of expression and First
Amendment rights for granted. He spoke of ABFFE's 17-year history and its continuing
relevance, thanks to the participation of booksellers and current ABFFE President
Chris Finan.
Finan noted that when he began at ABFFE in 1998, "Oren told me that it
was important to keep the issues in front of booksellers who have limited time."
With tongue firmly in cheek, he noted that, in the subsequent years, he had
been "blessed" with a wealth of privacy and free expression issues,
including Ken Starr's inquest into Monica Lewinsky's bookstore records, the
Tattered Cover's legal case to protect reader privacy, and the encroachments
on First Amendment rights following passage of the USA Patriot Act. Looking
ahead, Finan mentioned new ABFFE initiatives, including fundraising, which at
the show includes the organization's Silent Auction and sales of its BookExpo
America souvenir T-shirts.
The audience then turned to the screens for ABFFE's new production, Scenes
From a Bookstore: Free Speech Vignettes, produced by Kerry Slattery of Skylight
Books in Los Angeles. With considerable humor and a healthy dose of hyperbole,
the film portrayed several serious issues involving censorship--complaints by
parents when their children purchase "inappropriate" materials; criticism from
political minorities that certain books are censored by either not stocking
or hiding them; and threats to customer privacy when authorities, or others,
ask booksellers for customer records.
The lunch's format was designed to allow booksellers at their tables to discuss
the scenarios shown in each film and to brainstorm about possible alternative
responses. Betsy Burton of The King's English in Salt Lake City, Utah, moderated
a lively exchange, in which booksellers agreed that stores need to be prepared
for these sorts of in-store conflicts and to have policies in place before complaints
arise. For instance, Sherri Gallentine of Vroman's in Pasadena, California,
suggested that a parent who complains about offensive materials sold to her
son should be given a refund, and that a bookseller might say, "I completely
understand. Let's go a find a book together--on us."
Mary Yockey of Anderson's Bookshop in Naperville, Illinois, said, "Thanks to
all the education that ABFFE has done, I feel we're prepared for these situations.
I wouldn't have known what to do previously." She mentioned how effective it
was to have scenarios, "to prepare ahead of time and not do it cold."
Several booksellers mentioned wanting to use the film vignettes for staff training.
Finan told BTW that ABFFE was exploring ways to disseminate the production
by sending stores DVDs upon request, and possibly posting it on the ABFFE, BookWeb,
or YouTube websites. --Nomi Schwartz
Topics: BookExpo, Free Expression,
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