[bksvol-discuss] Re: Banned Books Week

  • From: Carrie Karnos <ckarnos@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 30 Sep 2007 06:06:40 -0700 (PDT)

Thanks for posting the list, Maithe!  I'll try to get the ones we don't already 
have.

Carrie

maithe007 <maithe007@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:       I got this from one of my 
groups...thought you guys  might find this interesting.  The sad thing is that 
this is just the tip of  the iceberg.  
  
 Maithe
  
 Yes, that's right it's Banned Books  Week!
  
 The American Library Association [ALA] host this  week to ensure the
public is aware that books are being taken off school and  public
library shelves at the behest of one person or group.  Not all  books
that are challenged are banned or restricted, but yes, it does  happen
where a book will be taken out of a collection, never to be  returned
again.
  
 Most books challenged are to protect  children.  Before I go any
further, the ALA states:  "Librarians  and governing bodies should
maintain that parents-and only parents-have the  right and the
responsibility to restrict the access of their children-and  only their
children-to library resources."  No matter how busy a parent  is, it is
for them to monitor the books their kids are reading, not deny  others
the use of a book.
  
 So what type of books are we talking about?   That's what I'll share
with you this week - a taste of what some communities  are having
problems with.  Today, I'll give you the books challenged,  restricted,
removed, or banned in 2006-07.  It is not a complete list  because
about 85% of challenged library materials receive no media  attention
and are therefore unreported.  I have included entries  [exactly as
reported] for a few of them so you can see some of the  reasoning
behind the challenges.  These and more can all be found in  "Banned
Books" by Robert P. Doyle.  They are:-
  
 Alvarez, Julie.  How the Garcia Girls Lost  Their Accents.
Ancona, George.  Cuban Kids.
Angelou, Maya.  I  Know Why a Caged Bird Sings.
Atwood, Margaret.  The Handmaid's  Tale.
  
 Baskin, Julia, Lindsey Newman, Sophia Politt-Cohen,  and Courtney
Toombs.  The Notebook Girls. Warner Bks.  Challenged,  but retained at
the Cape May County, NJ Library (2006).  The book is  comprised of the
entries four New York City high-school students made in a  shared
journal in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist  attacks.
  
 Bechdel, Alison.  Fun Home: A Family  Tragicomic.
Birdseye, Tom.  Attack of the Mutant Underwear.
Bradbury,  Ray.  Fahrenheit 451.
Bradbury, Ray.  The Veldt.
Brown,  Dan.  The Da Vinci Code.
Burroughs, Augusten.  Running With  Scissors.
Chbosky, Stephen.  The Perks of Being a  Wallflower.
Chevalier, Tracey.  Girl With a Pearl Earring.
Chomsky,  Noam, and Edward S. Herman.  Manufacturing Consent: The
Political  Economy of the Mass Media.
Chopin, Kate.  The Awakening.
  
 Christensen, James C., Renwick St. James and Alan  Dean Foster.  Voyage
of the Basset.  Artisan.  Retained in the  Davis County, Utah Library
(2006).  The complainant objected to the book  after her five-year-old
son borrowed it from the children's section and  showed her the
illustrations it contains of topless mermaids and other  partially
clothes mythical creatures.  The author is a retired Brigham  Young
University Art professor and cochair of the Mormon Arts  Foundation.
  
 Cormier, Robert.  The Chocolate  Wars.
Crutcher, Chris.  Whale Talk.
de Haan, Linda and Stern  Nijland.  King & King.
Draper, Sharon M., and Adam Lowenbein.   Romlette and Julio.
Eleveld, Mark, ed.  The Spoken Word Revolution:  Slam, Hip Hop & the
Poetry of a New Generation.
Fogelin, Adrian.   My Brother's Hero.
Frank, E.R.  America.
Freedom Writers.  The  Freedom Writers Diary: How a Teacher and 150
Teens Used Writing to Change  Themselves and the World Around Them.
Gaines, Ernest J.  The  Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman.
Going, K.L.  Fat Kid Rules the  World.
Gordon, Sharon.  Cuba.
Gravett, Paul.  Manga:  60  Years of Japanese Comics.
Gray, Heather M., and Samantha Phillips.  Real  Girl/Real World: Tools
for Finding Your True Self.
Green, Jonathon,  comp.  Cassell Dictionairy of Slang.
  
 Hedayat, Sadegh.  The Blind Owl.  Grove  Pr.  The widely acclaimed
Iranian classic, written in the 1930's, was  banned in Iran (2006).
"The new government intends to take positive steps for  reviving
neglected values and considering religious teachings in the  cultural
field."
  
 Hedges, Peter.  What's Eating Gilbert  Grape.
Jukes, Mavis.  The Gay Book: An Owner's Manual.
Kehret,  Peg.  Abduction!
Langley, Andrew.  100 Greatest Tyrants.
LeGuin,  Ursula K.  A Fisherman of the Inland Sea.
Levitt, Steven D., and Stephen  J Dubner.  Freakonomics: A Rogue
Economist Explores the Hidden Side of  Everything.
Lowry, Lois.  The Giver.
Mackler, Carolyn.  Vegan  Virgin Valentine.
Mathabane, Mark.  Kaffir Boy.
McBain, Ed.   Alice in Jeopardy.
  
 Mitchell, Stephen.  Gilgamesh: A New English  Version.  Free Pr.
Challenged in the Clearview Regional High School in  Harrison Township,
N.J. (2006) because the modern translation of on of the  oldest known
pieces of literature was considered sexually descriptive  and
unnecessarily explicit.  The work itself dates back to about  1700
B.C., some one thousand years before the writings of Homer.
  
 Mochizuki, Ken.  Baseball Saved Us.
Morgan,  Melissa J.  TTYL.
Morrison, Toni.  Beloved.
Morrison,  Toni.  The Bluest Eye.
Myers, Walter Dean.  Fallen  Angels.
Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds.  Reluctantly Alice.
O'Brien,  Tim.  The Things They Carried.
Opie, Iona Archibald, and Peter Opie,  eds.  I Saw Esau: The
Schoolchild's Pocket Book.
  
 Park, Barbara.  Junie B. Jones and Some Sneaky  Peeky Spying.  Random.
Challenged in the Wake County, N.C. schools  (2006).  Parent are
getting help from Called2Action, a Christian group  that says its
mission is to "promote and defend our shared family and  social
values."
  
 Parks, Gordon.  The Learning Tree.
Paulsen,  Gary.  Zero to Sixty: The Motorcycle Journey of a Lifetime.
Peters, Lisa  Westberg.  Our Family Tree: An Evolution Story.
Pollan, Michael.   The Botany of Desire: A Plant's-Eye View of the
World.
Richardson, Justin,  and Peter Parnell.  <em>And Tango Makes Three.
Rowling, J.K.   Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.
Rowling, J.K.  Harry Potter and  the Goblet of Fire.
Rowling, J.K.  Harry Potter and the Half-Blood  Prince.
Rowling, J.K.  Harry Potter and the Prisoner of  Azkaban.
Rowling, J.K.  Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.
Ruby,  Laura.  Lily's Ghost.
Sanchez, Alex.  Rainbow Boys.
  
 Schreier, Alta.  Vamos a Cuba (A Visit to  Cuba).  Heinemann.  Removed
from all Miami-Dade County school  libraries (2006) because a parent's
complaint that the book does not depict  an accurate life in Cuba.  The
American Civil Liberties Union [ACLU] of  Florida filed a lawsuit
challenging the decision to remove this book and the  twenty-three
others titles in the same series from the district school  libraries.
In granting a preliminary injunction in July 2006 against the  removal,
Judge Alan S. Gold of U.S. District Court in Miami characterized  the
matter as a "First Amendment issue" and ruled in favor of the ACLU  of
Florida, which argued that the books were generally factual and  that
the board should add to its collection, rather than removing books  it
disagreed with.
  
 Schwartz, Alvin.  More Scary Stories to Tell  in the Dark.
Sebold, Alice.  The Lovely Bones.
Sendak, Maurice.   In The Night Kitchen.
Shafak, Elif.  The Bastard of  Istanbul.
Silverstein, Charles, and Edmund White.  The Joy of Gay  Sex.
Steer, Dugald.  Wizardology: The Book of the Secrets of  Merlin.
Steinbeck, John.  Of Mice and Men.
Thompson, Craig.   Blankets.
Twain, Mark (Samuel L. Clements).  The Adventures of  Huckleberry Finn.
Vonnetgut, Kurt.  Slaughterhouse-Five.
Watkins,  Yoko Kawashima.  So Far from the Bamboo Grove.
Wood, Maryrose.  Sex  Kittens and Horn Dawgs Fall in Love.
Wright, Richard.  Black  Boy.


       
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