“Authors for Minnesota Day”: Minnesota Writers Rally on February 28 to Support Immigrants
Minnesota has always felt like a place where stories actually matter, where people don’t just talk about community but try, in their own imperfect ways, to live it. Lately, though, you can feel a heaviness settling in, especially among immigrant families who’ve been pushed into a constant state of watching over their shoulders. That shift hasn’t gone unnoticed. Minnesota authors and the independent bookstores that anchor so many neighborhoods are stepping in, refusing to let fear or silence take over the spaces where people come to learn, imagine, and feel like they belong.
Their message is simple and human: books build bridges, not walls. And they’re willing to fight for the people who walk across those bridges every day.
A Literary Community Draws a Line

Minnesota authors have been increasingly vocal about the presence of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) near libraries, bookstores, and other community spaces. Many see this as a direct threat to the people who make Minnesota’s cultural life vibrant.
According to Publishers Weekly, authors Jess Lourey and Kristi Belcamino helped lead a public call for ICE to stop targeting these community spaces, arguing that such actions “create an unwelcome presence in the state” and undermine trust in places meant to be safe for all.
Their stance isn’t political theater. It’s personal. Many Minnesota authors have spent years writing about displacement, belonging, and the fragile threads that hold communities together. Watching neighbors live in fear hits too close to home.
Bookstores Become Safe Havens
Independent bookstores across Minnesota are stepping into the gap, transforming their spaces into more than retail shops. They’re becoming gathering points, resource centers, and places where immigrant families can breathe without judgment.
Some stores are hosting “Know Your Rights” workshops. Others are raising funds through readings, community drives, and special events. Many are curating shelves dedicated to immigrant authors and stories that reflect the lived experiences of Minnesota’s diverse communities.
This isn’t charity. It’s solidarity — the kind that grows from shared space and shared purpose.
Authors Fan Out Across the State
Before any of the road trips or bookstore visits even begin, Minnesota is gearing up for “Authors for Minnesota Day” — a four‑hour stretch on Feb. 28, from noon to 4 p.m. Minnesota time, where writers across the state show up in person to stand with their local indie bookstores. The day isn’t just about signing books or shaking hands. It’s built to raise money for two groups doing real, on‑the‑ground work: the Immigrant Law Center of Minnesota and the Women’s Foundation of Minnesota Immigration Rapid Response Fund. It’s a reminder that stories can move people, but sometimes they also need to move resources.
From there, Minnesota authors are fanning out across the state, showing up in small towns, tribal communities, and city neighborhoods — anywhere people gather around books. In an interview with WCCO Radio, Lourey explains how bookstore visitors who donate to either organization will receive a special gift: “They’ll donate 20 of one of their books and anybody who makes a donation on site, and just shows the donation on their cell phone, will get to pick a free book off that table.”
These visits aren’t polished publicity stops. They’re messy, heartfelt conversations about safety, belonging, and what it means to keep showing up for one another when things feel uncertain. Bookstores become the backdrop — warm, familiar places where people can breathe a little easier and remember they’re not alone.
Writers Using Their Platforms for More Than Promotion

Many Minnesota authors have started shifting how they show up in public. Instead of the usual book‑tour routine — the tidy readings, the polite Q&As — they’re using their events to lift up immigrant‑led groups, mutual‑aid networks, and the people doing the quiet, unglamorous work of keeping families safe. More and more, these gatherings feel less like promotions and more like community check‑ins about belonging, fear, and what it means to look out for one another.
Some writers are giving away pieces of their royalties to support immigrant families. Others are sitting down with young writers from those communities, helping them shape their own stories in their own voices, because they know how much power there is in being heard. None of it is flashy. It’s small, steady work — the kind that grows trust one conversation at a time.
For these authors, this isn’t just about books or careers. It’s about refusing to let fear take over the places where creativity and community meet, and choosing, again and again, to stand with the people who make Minnesota feel like home.
Why This Movement Matters Now
Minnesota has one of the largest immigrant populations in the Midwest, and many of these families have deep roots in the state’s cultural and economic life. When ICE activity increases, it doesn’t just disrupt individual households—it shakes entire neighborhoods.
By stepping forward, Minnesota authors and bookstores are doing more than offering comfort. They’re defending the idea that community spaces should remain open, safe, and welcoming. They’re insisting that literature—this thing built from empathy and imagination—has a role to play in real-world justice.
And maybe that’s the most Minnesota thing of all: showing up, quietly but firmly, for the people who need it most.
