• TommySoda@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Just slap one of those “parental advisory” or whatever labels like they did to music back in the 90’s. It’s to the point that it’s pretty much ubiquitous for people to recognize. We make ratings obvious and upfront on covers for every other kind of media, why not books?

  • tiramichu@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    I can easily see both sides on this one.

    In one way I have little sympathy. It’s the same as parents complaining after they show their child a violent anime, that it was a ‘cartoon’ and so it must be for children - having made that snap judgement without investigating the contents in the slightest.

    On the other hand, as the article rightly suggests, there are established conventions in the publishing industry and this book defied them.

    They are conventions I personally kinda hate, because they are the reason every Crime paperback looks the same as each other, and every Sci-Fi book is instantly recognisable as that genre on the shelves. But the conventions do exist.

    In mass-market publishing terms, sparkly happy cartoon = children.

    The publisher and author totally knew what they were doing here and they did it anyway. It’s wilfully misleading.

    Whether established standards should be enough to absolve a parent of the responsibility to understand what they are giving to their child, though, you decide.

    • William@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      In this case, it looks like they’re in high school, too. I love anime and have seen the worst of it, and I’d never expect this to have explicit sex in it. If you told me it ended up being incredibly violent I’d be less surprised than about the sex.

      “You shouldn’t judge a book by its cover”, but that’s exactly what the cover is made for. This cover failed to represent its book.

  • Luke@lemmy.ml
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    3 months ago

    I place the blame squarely on booksellers (mostly Amazon) for this. By refusing to have any sort of consistency or transparency about what kinds of cover content will result in authors being “dungeoned” on their platforms, it essentially forces explicit content to have cover imagery and blurbs that obfuscate the content to such a degree that misunderstandings like this can happen.

    Words like “sweltering”, “sizzling”, “swoonworthy” in combination with “romance” are meant to be a clue that there is sex in the writing, but the cover simply can not be obvious about that without risking the book (and the author’s entire account) being unlisted without communication or recourse.

  • w3dd1e@lemm.ee
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    3 months ago

    I’m not saying this has never happened but I think this is a sensationalized article meant to get books banned.

    These books aren’t sold in the kids section. If someone found it and bought it, they were browsing an adult section.

    EDIT: I just spoke to a friend of mine who sells romance books in her shop. It is a bit of a problem, but not because of libraries or places like her shop. It’s places like Walmart or Target that just chuck the book on any old shelf and parents that don’t actually review the book without buying it.

  • sil@aussie.zone
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    3 months ago

    I mean games, tv, movies all have some sort of rating system so you don’t really have to spend a lot of time reviewing the content for your kids. Seems like a gap that this doesn’t exist for books.