Authors auction rights to name characters for charity



Associated Press

It can take years of late-night navel gazing for a novelist to choose the name of a character, says author Michael Chabon. Or it could come as quickly as an Internet auction on eBay, and in the process, keep a nonprofit dedicated to supporting the freedom of expression in America from closing its doors.

Stephen King, Amy Tan, Lemony Snicket and 12 other best-selling writers are joining Chabon next month to auction off the right to name characters in their new novels. The profits will go to the First Amendment Project, whose lawyers have repeatedly gone to court to protect the free speech rights of activists, writers and artists.

"It feels a little scary for most writers because when you're writing you're completely in charge. You can say this book is all mine, it's my world," said Chabon. "Whether giving some of that over has any monetary value or not, we'll see."

But bidders beware - most of the authors are clearly retaining creative control to use the names as they see fit.

King says the highest bidder will get to name a character in a new zombie novel he describes as being "like cheap whisky ... very nasty and extremely satisfying." Neil Gaiman will let his top buyer select the name for a gravestone. Andrew Sean Greer promises the winner may choose the name of a "coffee shop, bar, corset company or other business in another scene," but only "should it suit the author."

John Grisham is one of only a handful promising to portray the top bidder's chosen name "in a good light."

On Sept. 1, eBay Giving Works, the site's dedicated program for charity listings, will go live with the electronic auction. For the next 25 days, anyone with an Internet connection can bid 24 hours a day to insert names into their favorite writers' heads. The event's organizers say they believe it will fetch well over the First Amendment Project's goal of $50,000.

The benefit was the brainchild of cult comic author Neil Gaiman, who approached Chabon with the idea when he heard the group was running out of money. It will now constitute the single-largest fundraising event for the First Amendment Project, whose staff of 2.5 lawyers will gratefully leverage the goodwill of authors willing to help keep its doors open.

"It's nice when people say they want to raise money for you," said David Greene, executive director of the First Amendment Project, which was founded in 1994. "Because it was brought to us by the writers, it was even more special."

Greene says the money raised at auction will go to support their pro bono work representing clients being sued over free speech, free press and freedom of expression. One such case, over whether a high school student's angry poetry constituted a "criminal threat," recently went before the California Supreme Court.

Board member Chabon, who won the 2001 Pulitzer Prize for "The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay," said his own work would be meaningless without the freedoms afforded under the First Amendment.

"I don't think anything else can be hopeful or accomplished if you have the fear that you will get arrested or prosecuted or censored," said Chabon. "I saw a cry for help. So it was my goal to try to get writers whose work and whose name would be meaningful to the greatest number of people."

Author Lemony Snicket, who will let the top bidder determine an utterance by Sunny Baudelaire in his upcoming thirteenth installment of his "Series of Unfortunate Events," said he holds the First Amendment dear because "the only trouble I should get in for my writing is the trouble I make myself."

His only caveat: the meaning of the utterance may be slightly "mutilated."

ON THE NET

eBay auction site: http://www.ebay.com/fap

First Amendment Project: http://www.thefirstamendment.org/