Help end medical misogyny. Sign our petition.

Help end medical misogyny.
Sign our petition.

Sign the petition

Please or to access all these features

Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

SEEN in Publishing report on children's books

62 replies

SensibleStories · 17/06/2026 10:09

NC for this.
I've just received this post from SEEN in publishing and they've said it's fine to share. There's a link to the report in the text.

Through the Looking Glass, a report by SEEN in Publishing, Transgender Trend and Biology in Medicine, will be formally presented in a House of Lords committee room at the invitation of Baroness Jenkins at 4:30pm today.
This report describes how editors and authors in children’s publishing have, for over a decade, promoted both the idea that children can be born in the wrong body and surgical interventions to fix this. A flood of books aimed at children, some of them in the 0-5 range, flout statutory safeguarding guidance. Some of them contain illustrations of trans-identifying women with mastectomy scars, or gay men in leather fetish gear. The report suggests that publishers’ rush to create these kinds of books, which often substitute trite moralizing for good storytelling, may explain the sharp drop in children reading for pleasure.

In 2024, the Cass Review found no evidence in favour of gender affirming ‘care’ for gender dysphoric young people. As Through the Looking Glass argues, publishers continue to ignore Cass’s warning that even social transition is not a neutral act and pushes children toward a medical pathway. They have contributed to the dizzying 4,000% increase in girls experiencing Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria that Hannah Barnes and Lisa Littman have previously reported on.
As Dr Clea Thompson, D.Clin. Psych, M.A., states in the report:
Adults who present inaccurate information about children’s development through literature cause confusion, anxiety and doubt about how children understand themselves and their relationships in the world…. Children’s literature has been co-opted by lobbyists to serve an activist agenda, and is now a contributing factor in the social transitioning of children.

Carnegie Medalist and acclaimed children’s author Anne Fine OBE FRSL says of this report:
Would it be possible to put together a more damning indictment of the world of children’s publishing than we have here? I doubt it. It is shameful. Shameful. Publishers will rush to climb on any bandwagon. But this one? Really?
This dismal betrayal of young readers. This unthinking capitulation to a biologically unfounded ideology whose false and troubling messages have damaged so many families. Over the last decade, publishers, booksellers, librarians and a bevy of joyless would-be authors became a major conduit for trans-activist propaganda and harmful lies, while others (whose books sold a good deal better) were bullied into silence, or out of their careers, by positively terrifying campaigns of cancellation and spite.
…[J]ust as the children’s publishing industry appears to have been the first captured, it is still almost the last redoubt of this dangerous idiocy. Everyone should read this report.
For far too long, children’s publishers and authors have ignored the safeguarding dangers of promoting trans ideology to young children and teens. A course correction is long overdue. We hope that this report will give readers pause for thought.

Key points from the report

  • Ignoring basic biology and established and robust theories of child psychological development, a large number of recently published children’s books promote social transition, double mastectomies, and the concept of children being born in the wrong bodies.
  • By publishing, promoting, and purchasing age-inappropriate and scientifically inaccurate books written by trans activists, children’s publishers and children’s librarians are failing to adhere to statutory KCSIE and RHSE guidelines and eroding child safeguarding boundaries.
  • Books that promote acceptance, comfort, and care for the body a child is born in are rare if not entirely absent from catalogs and shelves. Their authors are subject to mobbing and denunciation by trans activists.
  • Children’s reading for pleasure is in sharp decline.
You can read the report now at Transgender Trend. SEEN in Publishing thanks report authors Dr Alice Hodkinson, Stephanie Davies-Arai, Shelley Charlesworth, Gillian Philip, Sibyl Ruth, Dr. Clea Thompson, an anonymous GP, an anonymous children’s author, the artist who contributed the illustration, the anonymous organizer of this project, and Julia Williams and Lily for editing and graphics. Thanks for reading! This post is public so feel free to share it.
OP posts:
WarriorN · 18/06/2026 19:43

Ee gosh divnt worry petal! I was just making sure anyone else reading knew exactly what a big deal she was!

WarriorN · 18/06/2026 19:44

She’s popped out of nowhere on this. I’m looking forward to see who else supports it.

WarriorN · 18/06/2026 19:45

(I don’t know she was the second laureate!)

(I was thinking though, her and a couple of others were the most well known children’s authors till JKR arrived.)

BlueLegume · 18/06/2026 19:57

Thanks @WarriorN gracious of you. At least I cited another author 😂

I suppose my interest in Anne Fine being such a contributor is that she has written books that have challenged gender stereotypes but also kindness. I hope she is able to bring some sense to the publishers pushing what I see as trans propaganda over recent years. Teens will always read boundary pushing literature. Flowers in the Attic was the one in my teen years.

It is targeting the very young that is concerning especially in picture books.

WhereAreWeNow · 18/06/2026 20:01

Great to hear Anne Fine speaking up.

TwoLoonsAndASprout · 18/06/2026 20:11

BlueLegume · 18/06/2026 19:57

Thanks @WarriorN gracious of you. At least I cited another author 😂

I suppose my interest in Anne Fine being such a contributor is that she has written books that have challenged gender stereotypes but also kindness. I hope she is able to bring some sense to the publishers pushing what I see as trans propaganda over recent years. Teens will always read boundary pushing literature. Flowers in the Attic was the one in my teen years.

It is targeting the very young that is concerning especially in picture books.

Nevermind - totally misunderstood! (Apologies!)

BonfireLady · 18/06/2026 20:42

I've been away from MN for a little bit (GCSEs in our household.... intense... 😬) but have ventured back and am very much enjoying this thread.. and of course the report.

It's a huge report, and I've only got as far as the end of Chapter 2. My observations so far are:

  • excellent foreword
  • difficult sections for anyone who is new to this topic. Some of the language feels a bit spicy in places.... but then perhaps it should, given there is a huge medical scandal still happening right under our noses. Too many children are still being drawn to the idea - by adults that they trust -that they might have been born in a body that isn't right for them
  • fab section on biology from Biology in Medicine

Also, as an aside, hooray for the mention of the boundary-pushing Flowers in the Attic. I adored that whole series, even though it did get a bit weird by the end. But the key point being that this was as controversial as things got back then. And it really was controversial - e g. incest, rape and subsequent pregnancy. This was edgy stuff for teens like me to be reading.

But thankfully it didn't a) try to persuade me that incest was a good idea** or b) lead me to make irreversible changes to my body by persuading me that perhaps the one I had was wrong, and needed "correcting" e.g. by chopping off body parts or taking hormones of the opposite sex.

**I don't think children's books overtly do this today either. However, they do attempt to persuade children that boundaries are boring and should be smashed down. "Love is love" is a supposedly strong enough message that it doesn't need qualification. There appears to be no boundary between the sensible interpretation (e.g. gay relationships being positioned positively) and..... well, anything. So perhaps being anti-incest would actually be considered as bigotry 🤷

BlueLegume · 18/06/2026 21:04

@BonfireLady excellent post. Personally I would love people to go into schools/libraries and ask to discuss the report.

The current state of the nation goes wider than this report, wider than the debate about gender. Fundamentally it is about safeguarding children.

We need tolerance in society but when that becomes suicidal empathy the vulnerable-I include children in this - become more vulnerable.

So many wise observations in George Orwell 1984.

The word ‘phobia’ means a fear of. Most people are not phobic of trans people or Islam - just wary or curious about what we are being expected to be tolerant of - especially around babies or young children.

We really need a bigger conversation as a country. Particularly around children and what they are exposed to.

MrsOvertonsWindow · 18/06/2026 21:05

So pleased to see this. Transgender Trend have been wrriting about this for ages.
One thing that's alluded to upthread is that so many of the "authors" of these books for children are completely talentless. I've had the misfortune to read some of them and they're trying to push their own personal agenda but have neither the skills, knowledge, creativity or interest in how children read, learn or access ideas.

So many of the books really are grim.

BlueLegume · 18/06/2026 21:15

It would be rather good for Anne Fine to get her publisher to support her and agree diversity is good but children do not need to have it pushed as propaganda to bow to an ideology. Let kids be kids.

ScrollingLeaves · 18/06/2026 21:52

I am so glad someone is taking this on. I have seen it in books, for the very young and also included in the ‘growing up’ and what to expect when your body changes type, with the information ‘some people have a gender identity that does not match their body.’

RedToothBrush · 18/06/2026 21:56

roseyposey · 17/06/2026 11:13

Thank you for posting this, I am definitely going to read it. I’ve been irritated by the number of rainbow-centred books aimed at even very young children over the last few years and so I am delighted it’s finally being called out for what it is.

We used to call this 'age inappropriate'.

BlueLegume · 18/06/2026 22:02

There is a perfect opportunity for the young in publishing to explain they were given no opportunity to do anything but embrace the whole trans movement. They can do it kindly. More importantly they do it by explaining reality of sex being binary to their consumers.

CornishDaughteroftheDawn · 18/06/2026 22:02

ArabellaScott · 17/06/2026 16:16

Juno Dawson gave a lecture on 'The Death of Reading for Pleasure and How to Prevent it'

Unclear pronoun antecedent aside, here are some quotes from his interview:

'Last December, when many of my author colleagues were sharing their top ten reads of the year, I found myself wondering: had I even read ten books? Honestly, I wasn’t sure.'

' I taught Noughts & Crosses to my Year 6 class—which, admittedly, might have been a little mature—but they loved it. They were completely obsessed. And that’s the point.'

'I’m a Sunday Times Bestselling Author who dropped English at the first possible opportunity. I gave it up at 16, after my GCSEs'

'I got a first-class degree largely by skimming abstracts'

https://www.homerton.cam.ac.uk/homersphere/blogs/interview-sunday-times-bestselling-author-juno-dawson

😶

It is such an embarrassment that he was invited to make that ‘lecture’.

I hope sanity prevails again soon.

TempestTost · 18/06/2026 23:04

HartSeven · 17/06/2026 11:10

I expect you're right about getting an OTT reaction from some quarters but there are no calls for book-burning in the report. It does call out poor decision-making and irresponsibility, and that's fair enough when you consider children's libraries are wasting public money on - to use the proper technical, academic term - utter tripe just because it promotes trans ideology.

Not just that. My children's services lead is beyond frustrated with the books that we are sent.

Stuff like an anti-racist board book, where "A is for Activism" stuff totally silly for a baby. All kinds of weird didactic stuff the librarian at the HQ buys because it's what the publishers tell her to buy.

And no, the kids don't care for it.

SchoolGuidanceQ · 18/06/2026 23:15

Thanks will look at the report tomorrow. Looks good.

just to note that Anne Fine, as well being a children’s laureate and a beloved children’s author, is the mother of author and professor Cordelia Fine, who wrote Delusions of Gender and Testosterone Rex.

SchoolGuidanceQ · 18/06/2026 23:23

WarriorN · 18/06/2026 19:44

She’s popped out of nowhere on this. I’m looking forward to see who else supports it.

Not quite. She also endorsed last year’s SEEN in publishing report
sex-matters.org/posts/publications/reports/everyday-cancellation-in-publishing/

SchoolGuidanceQ · 18/06/2026 23:27

And - sorry - now I look like a weird Anne Fine stalker - she had this letter published re the SoA Joanne Harris etc debacle.

https://x.com/RooneyRachel/status/1925517402894160339

ive always been really pleased when she’s spoken up.

Rachel Rooney (@RooneyRachel) on X

Anne Fine (OBE) is not wrong here.

https://x.com/RooneyRachel/status/1925517402894160339

WarriorN · 19/06/2026 06:36

SchoolGuidanceQ · 18/06/2026 23:15

Thanks will look at the report tomorrow. Looks good.

just to note that Anne Fine, as well being a children’s laureate and a beloved children’s author, is the mother of author and professor Cordelia Fine, who wrote Delusions of Gender and Testosterone Rex.

oooh I did not know this! Thanks!

WarriorN · 19/06/2026 06:40

TempestTost · 18/06/2026 23:04

Not just that. My children's services lead is beyond frustrated with the books that we are sent.

Stuff like an anti-racist board book, where "A is for Activism" stuff totally silly for a baby. All kinds of weird didactic stuff the librarian at the HQ buys because it's what the publishers tell her to buy.

And no, the kids don't care for it.

the boys are all reading bunny v monkey obsessively.

Then wimpy kid, horrible histories, Percy Jackson etc

TwoLoonsAndASprout · 19/06/2026 08:26

WarriorN · 19/06/2026 06:40

the boys are all reading bunny v monkey obsessively.

Then wimpy kid, horrible histories, Percy Jackson etc

All of the Phoenix magazine comic serieses (where Bunny v Monkey started) are solid. My uni-aged son devoured them (eta - when he was small). Really entertaining mix of silliness and adventure (and some non-fiction I seem to remember) with a brilliant range of illustration types. I’m so pleased kids are still enjoying them - though really, I shouldn’t be surprised, they are written for actual kids, not for some imaginary poppet that needs moralising to.

OttersOnAPlane · 19/06/2026 08:34

WarriorN · 18/06/2026 19:44

She’s popped out of nowhere on this. I’m looking forward to see who else supports it.

Not at all - her daughter is Cordelia Fine, author of Testosterone Rex and Delusions Of Gender and both have been vocal about the "born in the wrong body" stuff being utter bollocks.

Anne Fine's been onside all along. She takes no shit.

OttersOnAPlane · 19/06/2026 08:36

SchoolGuidanceQ · 18/06/2026 23:15

Thanks will look at the report tomorrow. Looks good.

just to note that Anne Fine, as well being a children’s laureate and a beloved children’s author, is the mother of author and professor Cordelia Fine, who wrote Delusions of Gender and Testosterone Rex.

My apologies, I didn't spot that you had already pointed this out.

WarriorN · 19/06/2026 09:09

TwoLoonsAndASprout · 19/06/2026 08:26

All of the Phoenix magazine comic serieses (where Bunny v Monkey started) are solid. My uni-aged son devoured them (eta - when he was small). Really entertaining mix of silliness and adventure (and some non-fiction I seem to remember) with a brilliant range of illustration types. I’m so pleased kids are still enjoying them - though really, I shouldn’t be surprised, they are written for actual kids, not for some imaginary poppet that needs moralising to.

Edited

oh yes there’s fights over who reads the Phoenix first in this house!

It’s quite high level language too. My 8 yr old was asking about the word “regime” the other day!

He really enjoyed the online version of Phoenix fest too.

This week was the 750th copy of the magazine.

BlueLegume · 19/06/2026 09:12

Anne Fine is an interesting intervention as she is represented by several publishers. Publishing is absolutely captured by the trans movement. It would be good to see some reaction from the publishers who promote and carry her work. I wonder how it is working in these organisations if you are a sex realist. Would like to hear from people in such situations.

Old Barn Books: The independent publisher representing her newer fiction titles like On The Wall.
Penguin Books: Publishes many of her classic and widely-known titles across the UK and globally.
HarperCollins UK: Publishes classic school and children's editions, such as Bill's New Frock.
Walker Books: Handles many of her popular children's titles in the UK.