

in November, and it’s scary to think he can come home and say, ‘My friends all identify as something else and that’s how I feel’ and make my son cry because no hormone replacement therapy.”īrave Books is moving away from Amazon and only selling directly from its own website, offering parents one book per month for an annual subscription fee of $12.99. “You get special attention in class now if you say, ‘Hey, my name’s not Billy, it’s Amanda,’” St.

Clair said: “The book is an unprovoked criticism of transgender acceptance and the growing number of young people identifying as transgender. Memories by McKaylie PhotographyĬulture gives Kevin a pair of wings and a beak to wear, though his attempts to live life as a bird fail in the pages that follow.Īuthor Ashley St. “I think there is a need for books that can help parents teach the values they hold dear.”īrave Books’ first offer is called “ Elephants are not birds, ” The story of an elephant named Kevin who loves to sing, and then is convinced by a vulture – named Culture – that it fights so well, it really must be a bird. “When my eyes were open, I saw it everywhere and I couldn’t see it,” Talbot said. “Elephants Aren’t Birds” author Ashley St. Kendi’s picture book, “” Antiracist Baby, “Calling on parents and children to “make justice a reality”, is the content that needs to be counterbalanced. And everywhere I look is propaganda,” the Montgomery, Texas father told The Post.Ī business ophthalmologist, Talbot points to Abram X. Launching this week, Brave Books will focus exclusively on stories for children, and offers parents “a conservative alternative to the current cultural activism our children are being taught in schools, in the entertainment they watch and the books they read, ” according to their website.Ĭompany CEO Trent Talbot, whose first child was born more than a year ago, formed Brave Books when, he said, he began to notice “there was a real war going on over the earth. A new conservative publisher wants to eliminate the “wake up” of bedtime.
