It’s not uncommon for Abby Bell to see teachers bearing books, wanting to offload them in between school years.

She’s the store manager of one of Chamblin Bookmine’s two locations in Jacksonville, Florida, which has offered enormous inventories of used books for decades. Hers is the bigger of the two, a 23,000-square-foot maze of shelves crammed with millions of books. 

But the teachers walking through the store’s doors these days are also navigating a different kind of maze, recently-raised by Gov. Ron DeSantis and legislative Republicans. New state laws focused on what books can be on teachers’ shelves have created confusion and even fear. And the president of Florida’s largest teachers’ union says the state hasn’t provided educators any maps.

“That fear is a reason they are hesitant to keep their books in the classroom, and why they are hesitant to buy new books out there, especially with so little guidance,” said Andrew Spar, president of the Florida Education Association, the state’s largest teachers union. “It creates chaos, it creates confusion and it’s had this chilling effect.”

Bell says she’s noticed something uncommon in this year’s influx of books from teachers. Joining the typical older, beat-up books are hundreds of newer titles, most of them children’s books depicting minority characters. 

And she’s not the only person in Florida’s used bookstore world that’s noticed a shift. 

‘They don’t want to be in fear’

About 150 miles down the East Coast, MerryBeth Burgess has seen something similar in Cocoa, where she owns Hello Again Books with her wife, Amy Elkavich. 

“We’ve had classrooms as low as elementary schools, we’ve had high school classroom teachers, go ahead and bring us their donations because they’re unsure of exactly what is banned, what isn’t banned,” Burgess said. “They don’t want to have to be in fear for their job, but they are on a daily basis.

“In some ways, it’s easier for them not to have a classroom library.”

On Florida’s Gulf Coast, in Pinellas Park, George Brooks says he’s gotten more than twice as many books from schools this year than last.

He and his wife, Sarah, own The Book Rescuers, which they launched in 2021 after learning that some big, used-book distributors were throwing away titles in mass quantities.