Dangerous is a self-published book by British media personality Milo Yiannopoulos, released on July 4, 2017.
The book was originally due for release on June 13, 2017, by Threshold Editions, a division of Simon & Schuster, but its release was canceled on February 20 due to an audio release in which Yiannopoulos praised aspects of pedophilia as having a positive impact on children. A day after its announcement, pre-sales for the book briefly elevated it to first place on Amazon.com's list of best-sellers. It returned to number one on February 1, 2017, a day after a violent disturbance occurred at UC Berkeley which deterred Yiannopoulos from speaking there.
Video Dangerous (book)
History
Dangerous was the first book to be published under Yiannopoulos's name; he previously wrote two poetry books under the pseudonym Milo Andreas Wagner. Two previous book projects, which he had announced, never came to fruition. Yiannopoulos received a $250,000 advance payment from Simon & Schuster for the book according to The Hollywood Reporter.
An early draft manuscript of the book was obtained by BuzzFeed News, which claimed it had numerous instances of self-plagiarism. Yiannopoulos responded, telling BuzzFeed "I will publish a book of Breitbart columns. Dangerous is a completely original, almost 70,000 word book." According to leaked emails from Yiannopoulos obtained by BuzzFeed, Yiannopoulos paid Allum Bokhari $100,000 to work on the manuscript.
Announcement
Announcement of the book drew outcry from more than 100 Simon & Schuster authors, including Tim Federle, Rainbow Rowell, and Danielle Henderson. Roxane Gay pulled her book from Simon & Schuster, stating that she was not interested in doing business with a publisher willing to give Yiannopoulos a platform.
Maps Dangerous (book)
Release
In a press release on May 26, 2017, Yiannopoulos announced that the book would be published by his publishing company, "Dangerous Books", on July 4, 2017. Soon after the announcement, the book was once again the best-selling book on Amazon. The book's launch was originally going to be located at the Jue Lan Club. However, on June 23, 2017, the owner of Jue Lan Club canceled the event after realizing that the event was about Yiannopoulos's book-launch and not a "Gay Pride" event. On July 7, Yiannopoulos hosted a launch party for his book at The DL, featuring a Hillary Clinton lookalike wearing a prison jumpsuit, "jihadi strippers", and dwarfs wearing yarmulkes intended to mock his rival Ben Shapiro.
Reception
Jocelyn McClurg of USA Today gave Dangerous a score of two out of four stars, saying that the book is simultaneously "very funny" and "boring". McClurg suggested that a more entertaining book by Yiannopoulos could be dedicated to his more "hilarious" musings on President Donald Trump, suggesting it be named "My Big 'Daddy' Issues" because he refers to President Trump as "Daddy". Writing for the "Digested Read" column of The Guardian, John Crace wrote that Yiannopoulos came off as "desperate" in his writings.
The book was a New York Times, Wall Street Journal and USA Today best seller. The book peaked at No. 1 on Publisher Weekly's nonfiction bestseller list and at No. 2 on the New York Times nonfiction bestseller list, staying on then New York Times bestseller list for five weeks. In its debut release on July 4, 2017, the book sold just over 18,000 copies, and not 100,000 as suggested by Yiannopoulos, and temporarily went out of stock on Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble, where it peaked at No. 1 and No. 68 of their bestseller list respectively. In the United Kingdom, the book had sold 152 copies as of 13 July 2017, according to a sales record tracked by Nielsen BookScan.
Controversy
Pre-release
The book elicited controversy, including a statement on Twitter by The Chicago Review of Books that they would not review any Simon & Schuster books because of the book deal.
On February 20, 2017, coinciding with Yiannopoulos receiving heated criticism for resurfaced audio in which he defended certain forms of pedophilia, Simon & Schuster announced it would not be publishing the book. The following day Yiannopoulos issued a press statement saying that other publishers have expressed interest in the book and that it would "come out this year as planned.".
Release
The book was released on July 4, 2017 by Dangerous Books, an independent publishing company started by Yiannopoulos in 2017. Yiannopoulos released a series of videos targeting the bookstore chain, Barnes & Noble, for declining to stock his book in stores; the book is available for purchase through their website.
Around the time of the book's release, advertisements of the book appeared in public metros. After complaints of the advertisements, Washington Metro subsequently removed them. Meanwhile, in response to complaints, the Chicago Transit Authority responded "CTA cannot prohibit commercial advertising, in this case advertising for the sale of a book by a political person, based simply on that person's political viewpoint."
Case against Simon & Schuster
In July 2017, Yiannopoulos filed a $10 million lawsuit against Simon and Schuster, alleging breach of contract.
In January 2018, Yiannopoulos's lawyer, Jeffrey Weingart, submitted Court documents announcing that there had been "a breakdown" in his relationship with Yiannopoulos due to "irreconcilable differences." Several days later, Yiannopoulos released a statement saying that although Weingart's law firm had served as "excellent litigators," he would represent himself against Simon & Schuster. Yiannopoulos explained that because Simon & Schuster had 'demanded that virtually all of the documents in this lawsuit remain confidential, and had them classified attorney's eyes only', it had not been possible for him to 'see what has been said about me and my book in my own lawsuit." Yiannopoulos believed that by serving as his own attorney he would be allowed to see that material.
While attending a court hearing in January 2018, Yiannopoulos argued that confidential documents, which had not been disclosed to him by Simon & Schuster were 'absolutely essential for me to properly assess my own case'. The presiding judge, Justice Barry Ostrager, disagreed and ruled that they contained "proprietary financial information' and that the documents had 'nothing whatsoever to do with the substantive merits of your case'. Justice Ostrager went on to explain the process that Yiannopoulos would need to follow in order to raise a dispute with a view to obtaining access to the documents.
In papers filed on 20 February 2018 with the New York supreme court, Yiannopoulos and Simon & Schuster requested that the case be dismissed 'without costs or fees to either party'. Simon & Schuster later issued a statement stating: 'We are pleased that Mr Yiannopoulos' lawsuit has been withdrawn. We stand by our decision to terminate the publication of Mr Yiannopoulos' book.' Yiannopoulos described ending the law suit as a 'tough decision' but the 'right one'. Yiannopoulos justified his decision, by arguing that 'it was always going to be hard to prove damages, as anyone who has ever hired a "damages expert" will know. I don't want to spend all the money I made from my book, and the next two years of my life, on a lawsuit.'
Simon & Schuster's editorial comments
In December 2017, Court documents filed in the US revealed the editorial concerns of the publisher Simon & Schuster about the manuscript of the book. As part of the court submission, Simon & Schuster's editor Mitchell Ivers described Yiannopoulos's first draft as 'at best, a superficial work full of incendiary jokes with no coherent or sophisticated analysis of political issues'.
As part of their feedback, the publishers recommended that Yiannopoulos needed a "stronger argument against feminism than saying that they are ugly and sexless and have cats" and that another chapter needs "a better central thesis than the notion that gay people should go back in the closet".
At one point the publishers criticised Yiannopoulos's assertion that 'When America landed on the moon, the Cold War essentially ended'. In response to the remark, Ivers noted that 'The moon landing was 1969. Berlin Wall didn't fall till 1990. Russia quitting the space race was NOT the end of the Cold War'.
At various points the publishers called on Yiannopoulos to substantiate assertions made in the book. Yiannopoulos was criticized for suggesting that the Hollywood left was more racist than Nazis, with the editor noting "I don't like using Nazi analogies. Ever".
Ivers suggested that Yiannopoulos's criticism that contemporary feminism was "merely a capitalist con-job - a money-grab designed to sell T-shirts to Taylor Swift and Beyoncé fans with asinine slogans", was hypocritical, and prompted the note "Um ... like your MILO SWAG?"
In light of the comments being published online, Yiannopoulos accused Ivers of flirting with him and being biased against his work. Yiannopoulos claimed that Ivers 'hates Republicans and thinks they are all virulent homophobes'. Ivers however not only had commissioned the work, but did so for Threshold Editions, an imprint of Simon & Shuster founded as "a forum ... for innovative ideas of contemporary conservatism". Yiannopoulos later claimed that the comments were leaked to the press in an effort to 'ridicule and demean' him.
References
Source of article : Wikipedia