An independent LGBTQ+ bookshop has accused mainstream chains of "monetising" queer people by only stocking books for the community during Pride Month.
Matthew Cornford, owner of QueerLit in Manchester’s northern quarter, said Waterstones was one chain to go big during Pride Month - but not all year.
He said all big book shops should have permanent sections for queer literature to tackle homophobia in society.
Waterstones said it “strongly supports LGBTQ+ publishing all year round in shops and online”.
Matthew, 39, said: “We need mainstream book stores to step up their game.
“Places like Waterstones is why my business exists.
"I went into Waterstones Manchester Deansgate a few years ago and very sheepishly asked ‘can you point me in the direction of your LGBT section?’ and they said they didn’t have one.
“This was the biggest book shop in the north.
"They take a whole window to brag they’re the biggest book shop in the north but they only put a pride section together during Pride Month.
“If you go onto Waterstones’ website they have no LGBT section but all the books have been pre-selected so during pride month it’s their main banner, so any time they can monetise it.
“But our community doesn’t just come out during Pride Month.
"We’re needing to understand ourselves all year round and find ourselves in literature all year round.
“Organisations like that – although great because they mean we exist – need to step their game up so they can support queer people that are in those small little towns that can’t discover us, that aren’t in big cities to find queer community.”
QueerLit has sent nearly 3,000 books to schools for free as part of a ‘free books for schools’ campaign.
Mr Conford said: “We are relevant to everything that is happening with regards to disallowing and removing LGBT books from school.
“I’m a section 28 baby. I wasn’t in a school where we were able to talk openly.
“No one in my school was out, although years later I now know there are lots of queer people who were at my school and in my age bracket.
“We started a free books for school campaign that to date I think we’ve sent more than 2,800 books to schools all over the UK.
“Libraries don’t have huge budgets but anything we think we can do to help an LGBTQ+ teen find themselves within literature to normalise the feelings and the emotions and the thoughts that are going through their mind is a huge thing.
“It is a massive campaign for us just because I wasn’t able to have that myself.”
A spokesperson for Waterstones said: “Waterstones strongly supports LGBTQ+ publishing all year round in shops and online, not just for pride month.
“Many of our shops curate dedicated displays and tables of LGBTQ+ fiction and non-fiction throughout the year.
“These will tend to be larger, and placed in more prominent positions, to mark pride month.
Matthew Cornford, owner of QueerLit in Manchester’s northern quarter, said Waterstones was one chain to go big during Pride Month - but not all year.
He said all big book shops should have permanent sections for queer literature to tackle homophobia in society.
Waterstones said it “strongly supports LGBTQ+ publishing all year round in shops and online”.
Matthew, 39, said: “We need mainstream book stores to step up their game.
“Places like Waterstones is why my business exists.
"I went into Waterstones Manchester Deansgate a few years ago and very sheepishly asked ‘can you point me in the direction of your LGBT section?’ and they said they didn’t have one.
“This was the biggest book shop in the north.
"They take a whole window to brag they’re the biggest book shop in the north but they only put a pride section together during Pride Month.
“If you go onto Waterstones’ website they have no LGBT section but all the books have been pre-selected so during pride month it’s their main banner, so any time they can monetise it.
“But our community doesn’t just come out during Pride Month.
"We’re needing to understand ourselves all year round and find ourselves in literature all year round.
“Organisations like that – although great because they mean we exist – need to step their game up so they can support queer people that are in those small little towns that can’t discover us, that aren’t in big cities to find queer community.”
QueerLit has sent nearly 3,000 books to schools for free as part of a ‘free books for schools’ campaign.
Mr Conford said: “We are relevant to everything that is happening with regards to disallowing and removing LGBT books from school.
“I’m a section 28 baby. I wasn’t in a school where we were able to talk openly.
“No one in my school was out, although years later I now know there are lots of queer people who were at my school and in my age bracket.
“We started a free books for school campaign that to date I think we’ve sent more than 2,800 books to schools all over the UK.
“Libraries don’t have huge budgets but anything we think we can do to help an LGBTQ+ teen find themselves within literature to normalise the feelings and the emotions and the thoughts that are going through their mind is a huge thing.
“It is a massive campaign for us just because I wasn’t able to have that myself.”
A spokesperson for Waterstones said: “Waterstones strongly supports LGBTQ+ publishing all year round in shops and online, not just for pride month.
“Many of our shops curate dedicated displays and tables of LGBTQ+ fiction and non-fiction throughout the year.
“These will tend to be larger, and placed in more prominent positions, to mark pride month.
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