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It may have started in late September, but Banned Books Week is already providing this busy readers with all sorts of new children’s book ideas!
Banned Books Week is the national book community’s annual celebration of the freedom to read. Hundreds of libraries and bookstores around the country draw attention to the problem of censorship by mounting displays of challenged books and hosting a variety of events. The 2015 celebration will be held September 27-October 3.

Banned Books Week was launched in 1982 in response to a sudden surge in the number of challenges to books in schools, bookstores and libraries. More than 11,300 books have been challenged since 1982 according to the American Library Association. Read more about Banned Books Week HERE.

I shared my own “banned book” experience on Thursday when I talked about the one and only time I “banned ” a book from my family’s bookshelf, and how I used the opportunity as a learning experience for everyone as well. I also whipped up my own Banned Books Week Booklist for everyone to enjoy as well.

In my weekly travels, I have also discovered even more book ideas, resources and booklists. Enjoy!



What book is your favorite banned book?
–
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The Waldorf Homeschool Handbook is a simple step-by-step guide to creating and understanding a Waldorf inspired homeschool plan. Within the pages of this comprehensive homeschooling guide, parents will find information, lesson plans, curriculum, helpful hints, behind the scenes reasons why, rhythm, rituals, helping you fit homeschooling into your life. Discover The Waldorf Homeschool Handbook: The Simple Step-by-Step guide to creating a Waldorf-inspired homeschool.

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The post Weekend Links: Great books for Banned Books Week appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
By: Maryann Yin,
on 10/1/2015
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Yes it’s true, there was once a book series that I banned from my then 12 year old. What’s that you say? The Magic Book Lady banning books from her literate prone household? Happy Banned Books Week everyone.

I’ve never been one who agrees with banning books. I believe in providing age appropriate reading materials for my children but not banning books. That worked until a little book called Hunger Games was discovered by my 12-year old. At this point the Hunger Games had been out a long time and had read it and it completely chilled me to the bone. The idea of putting up 12 children who all must die except 1 to save humanity just hit a little too close to home for some reason. The Hunger Game series is a well written and well conceived book series which still chills me to the bone whether in book or movie form.
I didn’t think another thing about it until we were at the library many months later and wonder son comes up with a stack of books in his arms, the top one being The Hunger Games. “Oh no, not that book,” I thought. And then I heard that very phrase coming out of my mouth. I said something very parental like, “It’s not age-appropriate for you and it deals with very difficult ideas that I don’t think you’re ready for.” End of story I thought.

Nope………
It had developed a cult following since I had read it plus two more books had come out in the series and well there you have it , a must read book.
One day I walked into the attic room known as the cubby at our house and there was Wonder Son sitting on the bed reading a book hidden by a folder and that’s when I discovered he was secretly reading The Hunger Games.
So what to do? I could punish him, but really. Punish him for reading a book? I don’t think so. The road I took was that of opportunity. Instead of trying to protect him I decided to use The Hunger Games as a dialog tool. I told him he could read the book but that I wanted to have a conversation about it when he was finished. He came out of the cubby, could read freely and we had the greatest conversations over the entire book series. My opinion remains the same, but I also learned why he was attracted to the book and why it didn’t seem as scary to him as it did to me.
We read the other two books in the series at the same time talking all the way through them. It allowed my voice and concerns to be heard. It allowed his points of views and concerns to be heard and at times we even agreed to disagree. I think that skill in itself is a very powerful and capable tool for both of us to have in our tool belts.
Since the Hunger Games, controversial and intense book discussions have continued with my wonder son as he is now a junior in high school. Just this year we had a very deep and meaningful conversation over The Scarlet Letter.
OK, so where do I stand with the Hunger Games? Go read it. Suzanne Collins is a brilliant writer to be able to elicit such strong responses. For us, her book series was a game changer and has opened the door to many incredible conversations.
Though Hunger Games is the only book I’ve ever banned, there have been many in the past. This week is Banned Books Week and this year’s theme is having to do specifically with YA (Young Adult) Titles. Here is a list of the most commonly banned YA books in the US. Have you read any of these ? What do you think?
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, by Sherman Alexie (Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)

Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi (Pantheon Books/Knopf Doubleday)

The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison (Holt, Rinehart, and Winston)

The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini (Bloomsbury Publishing)

The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky (MTV Books/Simon & Schuster)

Drama by Raina Telgemeier (Graphix/Scholastic)

Chinese Handcuffs by Chris Crutcher (Greenwillow Books/HarperCollins)

The Giver by Lois Lowry (HMH Books for Young Readers)

The House on Mango Street by Sandra Cisneros (Vintage/Knopf Doubleday)

Looking for Alaska by John Green (Dutton Books/Penguin Random House)

For more information about Banned Books Week have a look here and be sure and join the Virtual Read-Out.
***Some of these links are affiliate links.
The post I Can’t Believe I Banned A Book: Banned Books Week Booklist appeared first on Jump Into A Book.
Observing Banned Book Week with “The Amazing Bone” by William Steig
The American Library Association, American Booksellers Association, American Society of Journalists and Authors and the National Council of Teachers of English are among those groups sponsoring the observation and focus on censorship in reading, via “Banned Book Week” from September 27th to October 3rd. 2015. It is also endorsed by The Center for the Book in the Library of Congress.
A friend of mine told me our local library is featuring books on the list this week. Some “classic” reads are on this list, and it’s pretty hard to fathom how they ever made it on the list in whatever places they are banned.
If you check out the lists of links that I have provided, you will see there are a plethora of picture books and novels that have either been “challenged” or “banned” from libraries or schools because they “offend” the tastes of someone in the culture.
I read the difference between a “challenge” and a “ban” as it refers to a book, according to the American Library Association. A challenge is “an attempt to remove or restrict materials based upon the objections of a person or group.” Apparently this does not involve a mere point of view.
And a “ban” is the actual removal of the materials that are “challenged”.
And as the ALA asserts, these actions may be undertaken with the best of intentions and that is, to “protect others, frequently children – from difficult ideas and information.”
Parents rightfully can be very vocal about what is required reading for their children when it seemingly goes against their sense of what children of a certain age should be reading. And as a result School Boards and libraries are lobbied to either limit access to the offenders or ban them outright.
I am not going to get into a polemic on the right or wrong of this issue.
That is an issue for parents to debate and decide for their own children as to what they read or do not read.
But, I do want to put forth for careful consideration, one picture book that has been “challenged” in the past, as a model for what can and does happen.
It is a favorite of mine and of my now grown daughters. The author is writer/illustrator William Steig, renowned for his illustrations in “The New Yorker.” He began a career in picture book writing in his 60’s; and that was his age, and not the decade!
And what a career it was.
His insightful drawings, brilliant use of vocabulary (“odoriferous wretch” – a term used to describe a villain in “The Amazing Bone”), and his imaginative narratives, filled with kind, caring, despairing, noble at times, silly, wily, pragmatic, and very human animals, are nothing sort of amazingly unique – and real.
In “The Amazing Bone”, life hums along on a beautiful spring day for a pig named Pearl. It opens in an everyday sort of way, until she happens upon a bone that talks in any language and can imitate any sound. The bone can also make magical things happen when all seems hopeless.
An easy bond of friendship is formed between the two, yet danger lurks unexpectedly and is resolved by the bone! He himself is unaware of his amazing powers; that is, until he is forced to use them!
As the “unexpected” appears in the form of a smooth talking, lavender lapel-filled, and nattily dressed fox, the bone, using words and phrases that he intuited fleetingly from a witch, such as “Scraboonit” and “Adoonish ishgoolak,” it soon whittles the fox down to minuscule size - with words!
I guess what I want to say, and perhaps what William Steig hinted at in “The Amazing Bone,” is that words are very powerful things, and when they find their way into books, they are amazingly powerful – like those in “The Amazing Bone.”
And, as a parent, what a shame it would have been for my girls not to have read, and reread that book that lives in their “quotable memories” today.
Please give this “challenged” book a read as well as Steig’s “Sylvester and the Magic Pebble” that won the Caldecott Award in 1970 for “Best Picture Book of the Year”, given by The American Library Association, as well as his “Amos and Boris” and “Dr. De Soto,” that are but a sampling of his many wonderful picture books contributions.
Please decide for yourself the value of books on banned lists, and if they deserve a place in your child’s repertoire of reading. And while we are talking about lists, “The Amazing Bone” was on quite a few, and here they are:
1977 Caldecott Honor Book
1976 New York Times Book Review Notable Children’s Book of the Year
and Outstanding Book of the Year.
1976 Boston Globe – “Horn Book” Awards Honor Book for Picture Books
And so, to the naysayers of William Steig’s, “The Amazing Bone,” I quote from the words of the amazing bone to the fox:
Scraboonit!!!
file://localhost/bbooks/frequentlychallengedbooks/classics
posted by Neil Gaiman
Thank you all for taking part in the Humble Bundle, or just for putting up with me blogging, tweeting and facebooking about it. It's been over for a couple of days now: We just got a letter from the guys at Humble letting us know it was:
#1 on the Humble Book Tab
#1 Highest Overall Average for any Bundle.
#1 Media Coverage for a Book Bundle
And they went on to say:
This bundle was particularly special since it elicited such a beautiful and positive reaction from both our fans and Humble newbies alike. I talked with our Customer Service Manager yesterday and he reported that there wasn't a single negative comment. (Except new customers not understanding how to redeem their bundles. A very common complaint.) This has never happened before either!
There was a tremendous amount of delighted energy at Humble HQ since the launch. Everyone here was stoked to be involved. Dare I say that it was almost in the realm of The Magical.
I was so happy how many friends, acquaintances and people I do not even know gave it a push.
John Scalzi went further -- he reviewed my 1985
Duran Duran book, and let the review become a gentle meditation on who we are and who we were and who we become. It's at
http://whatever.scalzi.com/2015/09/22/duran-duran-neil-gaiman-and-beginnings/ and you might enjoy it.
Here are the final results for your interest:
Humble Book Bundle: Neil Gaiman Rarities
https://www.humblebundle.com/books?view=pPpiWRbzesK-Launch Date: September 9th 2015
End Date: September 23rd 2015
Avg. price per bundle: $19.63
32,294 bundles purchased
Total Revenue: $633,787.98
(Note the numbers might change ever so slightly over the next few weeks.)
I'll post the actual numbers here, and how much money that actually makes and how much is going where, when I get the information from Humble. Hurrah for transparency.
(Also, I commend to you the Banned Comics Humble Bundle that's going on right now: $231 of forbidden comics for Pay What You Like
https://www.humblebundle.com/books )
...
The Moth put up a new radio show and weirdly, in a week a son is born, it includes me talking about my father and my son:
http://themoth.org/posts/episodes/1520 (This was actually recorded somewhere on the Unchained Bus Tour of 2012.)
Miracleman, The Golden Age stories by me and Mark Buckingham is coming out right now on a weekly schedule. You really want to go to a comic shop and buy it. It's thrilling for me rereading it now, and really strange starting the process with Mark Buckingham of finishing the story we began so many years ago.
...
The baby is nine days old, happy and healthy and, slightly to my surprise, he makes amazing noises: squeaks like mice and gentle burbling like mourning doves and little chirrupping grunts like guinea pigs. I adore him. And his mother's doing really well too. In case you were wondering.

It’s Banned Books Week, a n annual event mostly held in libraries which spotlights attempts to remove books. This year’s theme is graphic novels, as discussed in this article from PW by Rich Shivener. The Comic Book Legal Defense Fund is sponsoring several events this week and has much more information and a list of banned or challenged comics here. The idea for GNs as a focus started when last year it was announced that the top ten challenged books nationwide includes Bone by Jeff Smith.
Tonight’s big event is a discussion by Scott McCloud and Larry Marder, co-sponsored by the CBLDF, Comic-Con International and the San Diego Central Library. Needless to say, if you’re in the area, it’s worth a listen.
By:
Janet Lee Carey,
on 9/22/2014
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Adult/Teen Librarian Danielle Dreger-Babbitt from Mill Creek Library WA is here to Roar with readergirlz for Banned Books Week
Welcome Danielle.
Tell us about Banned Books Week Banned Book Week was started 32 years ago to celebrate the freedom to read after more and more books were being challenged in libraries and schools. According to the American Librarian Association, over 11,000 books have been challenged since 1982. Over 200 of them happened in 2013! You can learn more about Banned Book Week on the ALA website. What do you do to spread the word about Banned Books Week and Intellectual Freedom Issues?
I do a banned book display each year. My favorite displays are the ones I did in 2011 when library patrons wrote about their favorite banned books and the 2012 display that took up a whole shelving unit. I love being able to showcase these banned and challenged books.
Along with each year’s display, I include Banned Book lists and pamphlets as well as bookmarks and buttons for library customers to take home. We’ve had essay contests where readers write about their favorite challenged or banned books and win copies of banned books. When I visit the middle schools to talk about books in the fall I often bring along books that have been challenged from other parts of the country and have the students guess why they might be banned or challenged. Readers Roar: (Let’s hear what teens have to say about banned books)
“If people read the books before they banned them, they might have a better understanding of why the book is important. If you ban a book, it only makes me want to read it more.”- Jessica, Grade 11
Any Banned Books you would like to highlight?
Some of my favorite banned and challenged books include Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi, Shine and TTYL by Lauren Myracle, and 13 Reasons Why by Jay Asher. And my absolute favorite banned/ challenged book is Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins. Most teens are amazed to hear that it has been taken out of some schools and libraries! What can readergirlz do to celebrate Banned Books Week?
Check out the activities on the BannedBooksSite . Readergirlz can celebrate their freedom to read by reading one or two banned or challenged books during Banned Book Week. Bonus points for reading these all year long, not just in September and for sharing these titles with their friends and family.
More ideas from readergirlz diva Janet Lee Carey: Grab your favorite Banned Book and RIP = Read in Public. Do a selfie while reading your favorite banned book and post it on your favorite social networks. Use twitter hashtag #BannedBooksWeek and @readergirlz when you post on twitter.
Use the site Support Banned Books Week to add a temporary banner below your profile photo. Divas Janet Lee Carey and Justina Chen's photos:
ONE LAST BIG ROAR from guest poster, Danielle
The best way to support libraries is to use them! Check out books and DVDs and CDs, use the databases to find information, and attend as many library programs and events as your schedule allows. By doing these, you are showing us that you think libraries are important. There are many ways to give back to your library. Consider becoming a volunteer or join the library board or Friend’s Group. Teens can join the library’s Teen Advisory Board and help make decisions about future library programs and purchases. You can also donate books to the library for the Friends of Library Book Sale. The money from these sales supports library programs and special events! About Danielle Dreger-Babbitt I’ve been a teen librarian for over 10 years and have worked in libraries in Massachusetts and Washington. I’ve been an Adult/ Teen Librarian at the Mill Creek Library for over 5 ½ years. I’ve been active in ALA’s YALSA (Young Adult Library Services Association) for the last decade and have served on committees including Outreach to Teens With Special Needs, The Schneider Family Book Award, and most recently The Alex Awards, for which I was the 2014 committee chair. In my spare time I write for children and teens. I love to read YA and MG fiction and cooking memoirs/ cookbooks. I own two cats and two badly behaved (but adorable) dogs. I also love to travel and recently visited Uruguay, Brazil, and Argentina. Let’s Link:
Sno-Isle Teen Blog
Thanks again for the terrific Banned Books post for readergirlz, Danielle!

It’s Banned Books Week! From The American Library Association’s website: “Each year, the ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom compiles a list of the top ten most frequently challenged books in order to inform the public about censorship in libraries and schools. The ALA condemns censorship and works to ensure free access to information.” Based on 307 challenges, here are the top ten most challenged books of 2013.
- Captain Underpants (series) by Dav Pilkey
Reasons: Offensive language, unsuited for age group, violence
- The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
Reasons: Offensive language, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group, violence
- The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie
Reasons: Drugs/alcohol/smoking, offensive language, racism, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
- Fifty Shades of Grey by E.L. James
Reasons: Nudity, offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
- The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Reasons: Religious viewpoint, unsuited to age group
- A Bad Boy Can Be Good for A Girl by Tanya Lee Stone
Reasons: Drugs/alcohol/smoking, nudity, offensive language, sexually explicit
- Looking for Alaska by John Green
Reasons: Drugs/alcohol/smoking, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
- The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
Reasons: drugs/alcohol/smoking, homosexuality, sexually explicit, unsuited to age group
- Bless Me Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya
Reasons: Occult/Satanism, offensive language, religious viewpoint, sexually explicit
- Bone (series) by Jeff Smith
Reasons: Political viewpoint, racism, violence
Here’s how the Horn Book reviewed 2013′s most challenged children’s and young adult books.
The Adventures of Captain Underpants: An Epic Novel and sequels
by Dav Pilkey; illus. by the author
Intermediate Blue Sky 124 pp.
09/97 0-590-84627-2 $16.95
Best friends and fellow pranksters George and Harold create a comic book superhero, Captain Underpants, and hypnotize their school principal into assuming his identity. Clad in cape and jockey shorts, Principal Krupp foils bank robbers and a mad scientist until the boys “de-hypnotize” him. Written in a tongue-in-cheek style and illustrated with suitably cartoonish drawings, the story is consistently laugh-out-loud funny. PETER D. SIERUTA
reviewed in the Spring 1998 Horn Book Guide

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
by Sherman Alexie; illus. by Ellen Forney
Middle School, High School Little 232 pp.
9/07 978-0-316-01368-0 $16.99 g
The line between dramatic monologue, verse novel, and standup comedy gets unequivocally — and hilariously and triumphantly — bent in this novel about coming of age on the rez. Urged on by a math teacher whose nose he has just broken, Junior, fourteen, decides to make the iffy commute from his Spokane Indian reservation to attend high school in Reardan, a small town twenty miles away. He’s tired of his impoverished circumstances (“Adam and Eve covered their privates with fig leaves; the first Indians covered their privates with their tiny hands”), but while he hopes his new school will offer him a better education, he knows the odds aren’t exactly with him: “What was I doing at Reardan, whose mascot was an Indian, thereby making me the only other Indian in town?” But he makes friends (most notably the class dork Gordy), gets a girlfriend, and even (though short, nearsighted, and slightly disabled from birth defects) lands a spot on the varsity basketball team, which inevitably leads to a showdown with his own home team, led by his former best friend Rowdy. Junior’s narration is intensely alive and rat-a-tat-tat with short paragraphs and one-liners (“If God hadn’t wanted us to masturbate, then God wouldn’t have given us thumbs”). The dominant mode of the novel is comic, even though there’s plenty of sadness, as when Junior’s sister manages to shake off depression long enough to elope — only to die, passed out from drinking, in a fire. Junior’s spirit, though, is unquenchable, and his style inimitable, not least in the take-no-prisoners cartoons he draws (as expertly depicted by comics artist Forney) from his bicultural experience. ROGER SUTTON
reviewed in the September/October 2007 Horn Book Magazine
The Hunger Games
by Suzanne Collins
Middle School, High School Scholastic 374 pp.
10/08 978-0-439-02348-1 $17.99
Survivor meets “The Lottery” as the author of the popular Underland Chronicles returns with what promises to be an even better series. The United States is no more, and the new Capitol, high in the Rocky Mountains, requires each district to send two teenagers, a boy and a girl, to participate in the annual Hunger Games, a reality show from which only one of the twenty-four participants will emerge victorious — and alive. When her younger sister is chosen by lottery to represent their district, Katniss volunteers to go in her stead, while Peeta, who secretly harbors a crush on Katniss, is the boy selected to join her. A fierce, resourceful competitor who wins the respect of the other participants and the viewing public, Katniss also displays great compassion and vulnerability through her first-person narration. The plot is front and center here — the twists and turns are addictive, particularly when the romantic subplot ups the ante — yet the Capitol’s oppression and exploitation of the districts always simmers just below the surface, waiting to be more fully explored in future volumes. Collins has written a compulsively readable blend of science fiction, survival story, unlikely romance, and social commentary. JONATHAN HUNT
reviewed in the September/October 2008 Horn Book Magazine
A Bad Boy Can Be Good for a Girl
by Tanya Lee Stone
High School Lamb/Random 227 pp.
1/06 0-385-74702-0 $14.95 g
Library edition 0-385-90946-2 $16.99
“Stupid / humiliated / foolish / stung / heartbroken / pissed off / and a little / bit / wiser.” High school freshman Josie sums up how she feels after falling for an only-out-for-one-thing senior, and she isn’t alone. The three (very different) teen girl narrators in this candid free-verse novel form a chorus of varied perspectives on how a “bad boy” — the same boy for all three — causes them to lose control before they even realize what’s happening. Stone’s portrayal of the object of their (dis)affection is stereotyped, but the three girls are distinct characters, and she conveys the way the girls’ bodies and brains respond to the unnamed everyjerk in electrically charged (and sexually explicit) detail. Finally returning to her senses, Josie decides to post warnings about her ex in the back of the school library’s copy of Judy Blume’s Forever…because “every girl reads it eventually.” Others add their own caveats in a reassuring show of sisterhood. As this scribbled “support group” illustrates, even the most careful and self-aware among us sometimes gets bitten by the snake in the grass. CHRISTINE M. HEPPERMAN
reviewed in the January/February 2006 issue of The Horn Book Magazine
Looking for Alaska
by John Green
High School Dutton 237 pp.
3/05 0-525-47506-0 $15.99 g
A collector of famous last words, teenage Miles Halter uses Rabelais’s final quote (“I go to seek a Great Perhaps”) to explain why he’s chosen to leave public high school for Culver Creek Preparatory School in rural Alabama. In his case, the Great Perhaps includes challenging classes, a hard-drinking roommate, elaborate school-wide pranks, and Alaska Young, the enigmatic girl rooming five doors down. Moody, sexy, and even a bit mean, Alaska draws Miles into her schemes, defends him when there’s trouble, and never stops flirting with the clearly love-struck narrator. A drunken make-out session ends with Alaska’s whispered “To be continued?” but within hours she’s killed in a car accident. In the following weeks, Miles and his friends investigate Alaska’s crash, question the possibility that it could have been suicide, and acknowledge their own survivor guilt. The narrative concludes with an essay Miles writes about this event for his religion class — an unusually heavy-handed note in an otherwise mature novel, peopled with intelligent characters who talk smart, yet don’t always behave that way, and are thus notably complex and realistically portrayed teenagers. PETER D. SIERUTA
reviewed in the March/April 2005 Horn Book Magazine
Bone: Out from Boneville and sequels
by Jeff Smith; illus. by Jeff Smith and Steve Hamaker
Intermediate Scholastic/Graphix 140 pp.
2/05 0-439-70623-8 $18.95
When greedy Phoney Bone is run out of town, his cousins, Fone and Smiley, join him. Fone makes friends with a country girl, her no-nonsense gran’ma, and a dragon; Phoney must contend with ferocious rat creatures who are led by a mysterious “hooded one” and who want Phoney’s soul. This graphic novel (originally published in comic-book form) is slow paced but nevertheless imaginative. MARK ADAM
reviewed in the Fall 2005 Horn Book Guide
Are you reading any banned books this week?

The post Banned Books Week 2014 appeared first on The Horn Book.
By:
Jen Robinson,
on 9/27/2013
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Here are highlights from the links that I shared on Twitter this week @JensBookPage.
Banned Books Week
Love.Life.Read.: Let's Talk About It...A Topic Near and Dear to My Heart... #BannedBooksWeek by @scharle4 http://ow.ly/p8Tc0
Thoughts on Banned Books at Stacked and @bookriot from @catagator http://ow.ly/p8PBU #BannedBooksWeek
Most-Challenged Books of 2012 (Topped by Captain Underpants series) |@tashrow for #BannedBooksWeek http://ow.ly/pbaZp
Book Lists
Stacked: Books with Strong or Unique Worldbuilding, selected by Kimberly http://ow.ly/pdpmu #yalit
Children's Books With Single Parents, selected by @PragmaticMom http://ow.ly/pdpf8 #kidlit
Chapter Book Mystery Series recommended by @CoffeeandCrayon http://ow.ly/pdp3w #kidlit
So You Want to Read Middle Grade: some popular middle grade recs from Jonathan Hunt @greenbeanblog http://ow.ly/pbbrw #kidlit
50 Books Every Parent Should Read to Their Child – Emily Temple @Flavorwire http://ow.ly/pbaRe #kidlit
Great Easy Reader Books for Kids, recommended by @momandkiddo http://ow.ly/p8S15 #kidlit
RT @tashrow Top 10 Children’s Picture Books to Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month http://buff.ly/1dpV90U #kidlit
Cybils
On the #Cybils blog: #Poetry: The Small but Mighty Genre, by @JoneMac53 http://ow.ly/pfwRc @Cybils
On the #Cybils blog: Nonfiction Elementary/Middle Grade-- Category Description from Jennifer Wharton http://ow.ly/pdnfx #kidlit
On the #Cybils blog: Graphic Novels- Category Description http://ow.ly/p8RSa @lizjonesbooks #kidlit
Meet the #Cybils Easy Reader/Early Chapter Panelists • Family Bookshelf @readingtub http://ow.ly/p8Rs5
RT @LauraPSalas: Have you chosen your favorite nonfiction books of the past year? #Cybils nominations open soon! http://ow.ly/p7keB #kidlit
At Wands and Worlds: #Cybils Awards 2013: Details on the Speculative Fiction Category from @SheilaRuth http://ow.ly/p408U
Growing Bookworms
Very nice. @anneursu on what books mean to her son ("Books are a pocket he tucks himself into") @NerdyBookClub http://ow.ly/pbbL3
Details idea for sharing a specific #picturebook | Read Aloud TATTLER #2 (Enemy Pie) | @aliposner http://ow.ly/pbc0h
Censorship in the Home: Yay or Nay? asks @NoVALibraryMom http://ow.ly/pdoCN #kidlit
Reading to children gets better and better as they get older | Tim Lott @guardianbooks http://ow.ly/p5pys via @librareanne #literacy
KidLitCon
Register now for KidLitCon 2013 in Austin this November, urges @charlotteslib, "#KidLitCons are a wonderful thing." http://ow.ly/pdBa7
The Case for #KidLitCon (vs other conventions) by @MotherReader "I hug the real people that Ive known online forever" http://ow.ly/pdmor
Press Release Fun: #KidLitCon 2013 is Nigh!! — @fuseeight http://ow.ly/paEMw
The call for papers for #kidlitcon is up! Don't miss it. http://ow.ly/23srs1 #kidlit
Learning
Some truth to this: Schools Are Good for Showing Off, Not for Learning | Peter Gray in Psychology Today http://ow.ly/p41EV
Why Even the Worst Bloggers Are Making Us Smarter | Networks nurture good ideas | Wired Mag http://ow.ly/p5pqg via @catagator
On Reading and Writing
RT @heisereads: Fab post from @ProfessorNana on why books on tough topics are so important for kids to to read. http://professornana.livejournal.com/800907.html
Must read post by Gary Soto in @HuffPostBooks | Why I've Stopped Writing Children's Literature http://ow.ly/pfwof via @medinger
Why science fiction isn't just for geeky boys | Jennifer Ridyard @guardianbooks http://ow.ly/pbaHH via @PWKidsBookshelf #kidlit
Interesting musings and data from @charlotteslib on MG SFF blogging and gender imbalance http://ow.ly/p8QY6 #kidlit
Interesting thoughts on Middle Grade Bloggers as Fans, Gatekeepers, Partners of the Industry from @charlotteslib http://ow.ly/p6mMY
Thoughts on Book Endings by @mstiefvater @NerdyBookClub http://ow.ly/p41eq | It is devastating to reach the end of a well-loved book.
RT @tashrow A Reading App Raises a Question: What Does It Mean to Own a Book? : The New Yorker http://buff.ly/16E06Bt #ebooks
Parenting
Lovely. A #kidlit-quote filled letter: To My Dearest Little Women- A Letter to My Daughters from @BooksBabiesBows http://ow.ly/p2eug
Food for thought. @StaceyLoscalzo on The Need for Margin (space in our kids' lives) http://ow.ly/pfxM7
Great stuff! Why does dining table conversation matter & what does it teach? asks @TrevorHCairney http://ow.ly/pfBZN
Programs and Research
My goodness. Very cool! @Scholastic Donates One Million Books to @ReachOutAndRead reports @sljournal http://ow.ly/pb8Lm
Read for the Record with Loren Long and ‘Otis’ is coming October 3, reports @sljournal http://ow.ly/pb8Cz @jumpstartkids
Neat! @FirstBook Pledges $9 Million by 2016 to Expand Distribution Internationally | @sljournal http://ow.ly/pb8sY
News: Congratulations to @ReachOutAndRead for receiving the Rubenstein Prize for their #literacy work! http://bit.ly/17XRntn
© 2013 by Jennifer Robinson of Jen Robinson's Book Page. All rights reserved. You can also follow me @JensBookPage or at my Growing Bookworms page on Facebook.
September 22-28, 2013 is Banned Book Week. In honor of that week, I will be blogging about banned or challenged books this month.
Perhaps more than any other genre with the possible exception of literary fiction (and that's an iffy comparison), Science Fiction, and its cousin Fantasy, is about ideas. Ideas can be controversial, and often bring out the would-be censors.
Worlds Without End has a Web page that lists 47 frequently challenged or banned Science Fiction and Fantasy books. What do you think of the books on their list? I'll bet that, if you are a SF/F reader, some of your favorites are on their list. How would your life be different if these books had been kept from you by well-meaning parents or community activists?
- The Amulet of Samarkand, Jonathon Stroud
- Animal Farm, George Orwell
- Brave New World, Aldous Huxley
- Carrie, Stephen King
- Cat's Cradle, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
- A Clockwork Orange, Anthony Burgess
- Cujo, Stephen King
- The Day After Tomorrow, Robert A. Heinlein
- The Dead Zone, Stephen King
- Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury
- Flowers for Algernon, Daniel Keyes
- Frankenstein, Mary Shelley
- The Giver, Lois Lowry
- Grendel, John Gardner
- Gulliver's Travels, Jonathan Swift
- The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood
- Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, J.K. Rowling
- Beloved, Toni Morrison
- The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Douglas Adams
- Interview with the Vampire, Anne Rice
- Lord of the Flies, William Golding
- The Lord of the Rings, J.R.R. Tolkien
- The Hobbit, J.R.R. Tolkien
- The Martian Chronicles, Ray Bradbury
- The Master and Margarita, Mikhail Bulgakov
- Naked Lunch, William S. Burroughs
- Nineteen Eighty-Four, George Orwell
- Roadside Picnic, Arkady Strugatsky and Boris Strugatsky
- The Satanic Verses, Salman Rushdie
- Shade's Children, Garth Nix
- Slaughterhouse Five, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
- Stranger in a Strange Land, Robert A. Heinlein
- We, Yevgeny Zamyatin
- Welcome to the Monkey House, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr.
- The Iron Dream, Norman Spinrad
- The Golden Compass, Philip Pullman
- The Subtle Knife, Philip Pullman
- The Amber Spyglass, Philip Pullman
- The Lovers, Philip Jose Farmer
- The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins
- Catching Fire, Suzanne Collins
- Mockingjay, Suzanne Collins
- The Lovely Bones, Alice Sebold
- Tithe, Holly Black
- Valiant, Holly Black
- Ironside, Holly Black
- Ragtime, E. L. Doctorow
Hi, everyone! Today, I'm hanging out over at
Random Acts of Reading, where I've been asked to participate in their book blogger panel. We're celebrating the 30th anniversary of the ALA's Banned Books Week. Hop over there to see what MG and YA banned books we're talking about. (And please note that this wonderful poster was created by Roger Roth, Pennsylvania artist and illustrator of
The Roller Coaster Kid by Mary Ann Rodman.)
And don't forget my giveaway for THE SEVEN TALES OF TRINKET -- please go to
this post to enter.
See you soon!
Following Scott's excellent post on Banned Books Week, I wanted to add my personal experience regarding this topic.
I was born in Argentina at the peak of the last military dictatorship, in 1977. The society in which I was born and raised was oppressed for years until the people united against tyranny and said "Nunca Mas," Never Again. When I was young, there were a lot of things that weren't available to me and the rest of the population. Some of them were books, music, and theater. Whatever made it to the public was dubbed in Spanish with all the consequences this brings. The message was diluted to what a small group of people thought it was okay for society. In fact, it wasn't until I was in my twenties that I read Little Women in English for the first time and discovered that several paragraphs and whole chapters had been deleted from the translated version I had memorized as a child. I felt like I had been hit in the stomach by a futbol going a hundred miles an hour (and I have in real life. I know that feeling very well)
Among other things, I had never even heard of The Hobbit or of the Lord of Rings Trilogy. When I arrived at BYU, one of the first things I did was go to the library. I was overwhelmed by the amount of books that the walls and countless shelves of not one floor, but five! I could have stayed there forever and never go to class. In fact, if I never stepped in a classroom but was allowed to spend as much time as I wanted in that library, I would have been satisfied.
Fortunately, I did go to class; one of the first ones was an English honors in which we discussed The Lord of the Rings. I remember the very first quizz. I studied for hours, unused to the difficult language of the book (English is my second language after all, but Tolkien's wasn't the English I had studied for years).
I was dismayed when I read the questions. I had no idea who Bilbo was, and there were five questions on this character. When I complained to the professor, he said he had included questions from The Hobbit, and since it was popular culture we all should know it.
I still disagree with his logic, although it makes sense in a way. Eventually I did very well in that class, and I think the professor had a reality check: not all students came from the same background and culture, and as a consequence defined popular culture a little different from him.
Where I'm going with this is, no small group of people has the right to say what I am allowed to consider writing/reading/seeing/saying. During the military dictatorship countless artists were exiled from Argentina because their work was deemed revolutionary, anti-patriotic.
When I was in high school I had the blessing of being friends with a group of girls who, like me, loved reading and discussing the ideas we read. We borrowed and lent books to each other, and we talked. There were many books I read that I didn't like. But I could read them, or put them away if I didn't want to continue giving my time to something I didn't enjoy. Yesterday, I was reading a Stephen King's book in English for the first time, and I reached a passage that really disturbed me because of the violence. I put it away. Do I think no one should ever read that book? No. Everyone has the right to read whatever they please. My son is almost twelve, and he's a read-a-holic like his mother. However, there are some books I don't want him to read yet. There is plenty of time for some things. But when he's old enough, they'll be available for him.
Sometimes when we read these now so popular dystopian books, we as readers are horrified by some aspects of those fictional societies. I'm horrified because I lived in one, and the effects of the lack of freedom TO THINK are devastating. My country still hasn't recovered.
Read books. Banned or not. Think for yourself. Give others the same right.
By:
Cheryl Rainfield,
on 10/2/2012
Blog:
Cheryl Rainfield: Avid Reader, Teen Fiction Writer, and Book-a-holic. Focus on Children & Teen Books
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In the video below, I talk about Scars being challenged, why I wrote Scars, and the need for “dark” books – for Banned Book Week. I read banned and challenged books, and I hope you do, too!
Here are some of my favorite quotes about banning books and censorship:
“Books and ideas are the most effective weapons against intolerance and ignorance.”
- Lyndon Baines Johnson
“There are worse crimes than burning books. One of them is not reading them. ”
- Joseph Brodsky
“If all printers were determined not to print anything till they were sure it would offend nobody, there would be very little printed.”
- Benjamin Franklin
“Where they have burned books, they will end in burning human beings.”
- Heinrich Heine
“Think for yourselves and let others enjoy the privilege to do so, too.”
- Voltaire
Do you have a favorite quote about banned books or censorship? How about a favorite banned or challenged book? Let me know!
Happy Banned Books Week! Let's celebrate intellectual freedom! From the
Banned Books Week website:Banned Books Week is the national book community's annual celebration of the freedom to read. Hundreds of libraries and bookstores around the country draw attention to the problem of censorship by mounting displays of challenged books and hosting a variety of events. The 2012 celebration of Banned Books Week will be held from September 30 through October 6. Banned Books Week was launched in 1982 in response to a sudden surge in the number of challenges to books in schools, bookstores and libraries. More than 11,300 books have been challenged since 1982. [...] According to the American Library Association, there were 326 challenges reported to the Office of Intellectual Freedom in 2011, and many more go unreported.
For example: To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee was #10 on the list of most challenged titles of 2011. The Hunger Games trilogy by Suzanne Collins was #3. For example: Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, Charlotte's Web, and Winnie-the-Pooh have all been challenged or banned because they include animal characters that use human language. In honor of Banned Books Week's 30th anniversary,
ALA has created a timeline of significant banned and challenged books. Attention booksellers and librarians: Get your camcorders ready so that you and your patrons/students can participate in this year's Virtual Read-Out! Learn more about it
here and
here.
Related Posts at my blog, Bildungsroman:
I Read Banned Books: Celebrating Intellectual Freedom and LiteracyThey Tried to Ban This Book Today, or, There's a Sticker on the Cover of This Book - inspired by the challenge of Just Listen by Sarah Dessen
The Bermudez Triangle by Maureen Johnson: Too Cool for School?
Today is the first day of
Banned Books Weeks, as well as its 30th Anniversary. Its purpose is to celebrate the freedom to read, to read anything we want even if it is unpopular or unorthodox. Remember May 10, 1933? The day the Nazis held their now famous book burnings? Some of my very favorite books went up in flames that day. And sadly,
Well, part of the reason for the book burning was to make sure the German people would not have access to other ideas beside what the Nazis wanted them to know. Ironically, they burned the works of Heinrich Heine, a German Jewish poet who had always been much loved by the Germans. It was Heine who prophetically wrote
"Dort, wo man Bücher verbrennt, verbrennt man am Ende auch Menschen"
(Where they burn books, they will also ultimately burn people)
You read that and can immediately see the importance of fighting censorship.
Thinking about all this, I thought I would include some of my personal WWII favorites that have been banned for one reason or another are
1-
Starring Sally J. Friedman as Herself by Judy Blume - not her most famous banned book, but Blume says she identifies with Sally more than any other of her characters and this is the most autobiographical book she has written.
2-
Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank - written while in hiding from the Nazis, there are people who felt this book was too sexual and pornographic, a viewpoint that never ceases to make my jaw drop when I read it.
3-
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller - this was banned for using dangerous language. I read it when I was about 14 and just starting to appreciate adult farce and though I loved this book, I forget to pay attention to the dangerous language. And yes, I know, I should have posted about it by now and I will at some point (and I will be sure to pay attention to the dangerous language this time around.)
4-
Slaughterhouse Five or The Children's Crusade: A Duty-Dance with Death by Kurt Vonnegut - this was recently challenged by a writer in Republic, MO, a fact I find mildly amusing because I actually know someone who lived there. The reporter felt the language was profane and there was too much explicit sex.
5-
A Separate Peace by John Knowles - another high school favorite, this was challenged for have graphic and offensive language and for being a "filthy, trashy sex novel." Again I forgot to pay attention to that then, and, oh yes, when I reread it.
6-
Summer of My German Soldier by Betty Greene - this was challenged because the ending was too pessimistic, too sexually explicit, and for unsuitable language. Why didn't these challengers say anything about the severe beatings Patty was given by her father or is abusive behavior more acceptable that a few dirty words?
Do yourself a favor and read a banned book this week and
Be sure to visit YouTube to view some of your favorite people "exercising their First Amendment right to read a banned book" at the
Virtual Read-Out
The Uprise Books Project wants to give teens access to banned and challenged books. The organization hopes to raise $10,000 on Kickstarter to fund the design and development costs of their website.
Here’s more about the project: “When we’re through, kids throughout the country will be able to use the site to browse through a selection of books that have been banned and/or challenged somewhere in the United States and add the ones that interest them to their personal Wish Lists. As long as they’re between the ages of 13 and 18 and meet the income requirements, we’ll do our best to fulfill their requests. At the same time, folks concerned about little things like poverty, literacy and censorship will be able to search through some basic demographic data to find books they’d like to sponsor.”
The organizers have created several different rewards packages for supporters. Backers who donate at least $5 will be recognized on the finished site. Above, we’ve embedded a video about the project.
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
This is the last day of Banned Books Week and I hope everyone had a chance to either read a banned book or will in the future. And I would like to dedicate the following animated clip to the Republic Missouri professor who tried to have Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut and Twenty Boy Summer by Sarah Ockler removed from the high school's library. Students can now read these and other challenged books but only if their parents come to the library and checks them out for their teen.
The Joplin Globe wrote in an editorial “Instead of making it harder for books to be removed from library shelves, it will make it easier.”
The Christian Science Monitor stated "At the very least, we’re sure Vonnegut would appreciate the irony. The “Slaughterhouse Five” of the book's title refers to barracks at a Nazi prisoner-of-war camp. Now the book itself will be imprisoned in a “secure section” of school libraries."
Vonnegut certainly would have appreciated the irony.
And so it goes.
By: Maryann Yin,
on 9/30/2011
Blog:
Galley Cat (Mediabistro)
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The Los Angeles Review of Books (LARB) celebrated Banned Books Week with a series of essays by YA authors called “Getting Banned.”
The authors in the Getting Banned essays have all had their work banned or challenged at some point. Follow these links to read essays by Ron Koertge, Ellen Hopkins, Susan Patron, Sonya Sones and Lauren Myracle. LARB‘s YA editor Cecil Castellucci explained: “YA authors are on the front lines of today’s censorship battle.”
The web publication will also publish a two-part essay by English professor Loren Glass about the 1960′s obscenity trials Grove Press faced for publishing William Burroughs‘ Naked Lunch and Henry Miller‘s The Tropic of Cancer. Nickel and Dimed author Barbara Ehrenreich will also publish a Banned Books Week essay on Saturday.
continued…
New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.
By: Laura,
on 9/29/2011
Blog:
the pageturn
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Banned Books Week goes on and today’s booktalk is GEOGRAPHY CLUB by Brent Hartinger. It was successfully banned for its homosexual content in Brent’s own hometown in 2005 – read Brent’s great post about it – and has continued to appear on the most challenged lists. In Brent’s blog post, he quotes a local parent who defended GEOGRAPHY CLUB at the time: “This is the most bogus thing I’ve heard of [...] It is about gay students. However, the most important part of the book is that it’s about bullying, outcasts, about tolerance [...] This is a really good book for any student to read.”
Generously contributing a booktalk today is the eloquent, often provocative, teacher, librarian, and blogger Jonathan Hunt (you can also visit him over at School Library Journal‘s blog Heavy Medal):
When is a Geography Club not a Geography Club? When it’s the front for a Gay-Straight Alliance, of course! Russel Middlebrook believes himself to be the only gay student at his high school, but when he makes an online connection with a job from his school, he begins to realize there may be others, too. Ultimately, seven students will come together to form the Geography Club, offering support to each other through thick and thin. Readers will fall in love with Russell – regardless of sexual orientation – because his voice just rings so true: funny, angsty, yet wise. There’s been an explosion of gay and lesbian young adult fiction in recent years, but this gem remains one of the very best.
Thanks so much, Jonathan! For more information, you can see this interview with Brent, check out Brent’s website (in particular, his information for LGBTQ kids is a wonderful resource), and follow Brent on Twitter.

By: Laura,
on 9/28/2011
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A regular on the top banned and challenged books list, ANGUS, THONGS, AND FULL-FRONTAL SNOGGING by the fabulous Louise Rennison has a cult following (um, include me in that cult!). The book has been challenged for a multitude of reasons: age inappropriateness, profanity, and sexual content. It has also made the Top 100 list, which we can’t help but consider a distinction!
Today’s booktalk is by the uber-fabbity-fab Sarah Bean Thompson, librarian and blogger (GreenBeanTeenQueen). She’s also on the 2013 Printz committee! She’s a fan of Louise Rennison’s Georgia Nicolson stories and contributed a booktalk that you can use all year long in your programming:
Join Georgia Nicolson and The Ace Gang for a fabbity fab adventure through the craziness of high school. Georgia is madly in love with the sex god, Robbie. Too bad Robbie has a girlfriend who happens to be the annoying wet Lindsey. Georgia knows that she could get Robbie to fall in love with her if only she had the chance. And if high school and love triangles weren’t bad enough, Georgia has to deal with her fat cat Angus who is always causing problems and her embarrassing three-year-old sister who is not as cute as everyone thinks. Georgia’s adventures are always full of laughs as her entries into her diary recount her attempts to survive school, boys, and big noses. Growing up is never easy, but at least Georgia Nicolson manages to make it fun.
Thanks, Sarah, for joining us! For additional info to support your programming and curriculum, check out the Georgia Nicolson reading guide. I’m also a bit of an evangelist for the Georgia Nicolson website so check that out for a glossary, the complete snogging scale, and quizzes.
Last but not least, I’ll leave you with the trailer for the the ANGUS, THONGS, AND FULL-FRONTAL SNOGGING trailer:

I haven’t read this small novel since I was in the 10th grade, so it was interesting to reread it now, with oh so many more years of experience behind me, much like the narrator, Gene Forrester.
Gene has returned to his private prep school, The Devon School, 15 years after graduation and begins to recall his friendship with his roommate, Finny, beginning in the summer of 1942. On the surface, they present a facade of being best friends, getting along so well, no one would suspect anything could ever be wrong. Yet, they couldn’t have been more different. Gene is quiet, serious, intellectual, and not terribly athletic. Finny is boisterous, impulsive, not a good student, but a great athlete. Finny believes that people are innately good; Gene believes people have ulterior motives. That summer, their differences cause cracks in their facade of friendship.
At school for an unprecedented summer term, due to the war, all school rules seem to fall by the wayside. One afternoon, after jumping out of a tree into the Devon River, Finny pushes the unwilling Gene into doing it also. The jumping becomes a ritual of the summer for Finny, Gene and a few other friends. But when Finny forms the Super Suicide Society of the Summer Session with nightly mandatory meetings, Gene begins to suspect that Finny’s motives are to take him away from his studies and he begins to resent his roommate.
Gene and Finny continue in this pattern behavior, with Finny proving his athletic ability and pulling Gene away from his studies, and Gene always giving in to Finny's demands and resenting it. Even after Gene explains that he is aiming to be the best student of their year, Finny still manages to persuade him to come to the river for the ritual jump. This time, though, Finny wants them to jump together. Out on the tree limb, Gene bounces it ever so slightly, but enough to cause Finny to fall and shatter his leg on the river bank.
Gene’s feelings of guilt cause him to confess to Finny that the fall was his fault, but Finny refuses to believe him. It is only later that Finny does become convinced of Gene’s culpability and the idea that this is so proves to be too much for him.
The underlying theme of war is present throughout this novel, but the main theme is the idea of a separate peace, a peace that is made separate and apart from the world at large. Devon provides it by keeping the war at bay, out of the lives of the students, despite on campus training of senior for combat. Finny’s separate peace is the state of denial he lives in, refusing to admit that the world can be full of hostility. Gene’s is more complicated, but he too makes a separate peace. The question is with whom- Finny or himself?
Knowles wrote
A Separate Peace in 1959 and it didn’t take long for it to find its way on to high school and college reading lists. It is, after all, a classic coming of age story that stills stands up in today’s world. But it is also a challenged novel. In 1980, the Vernon-Verona-Sherill, NY School District deemed it a "filthy, trashy sex novel." In 1985, the Fannett-Metal High School in Shippensburg, PA challenged it because of its allegedly offensive language. In 1989, the Shelby County, TN school system thought it was inappropriate for high school reading lists because the novel contains "offensive language." In 1991,
A Separate Peace was challenged, but retained in the Champaign, IL high school English classes despite claims that “unsuitable language” makes it inappropr
You can also watch videos of authors, celebrities and people just like you reading from their favorites.
Banned Books Week (Sept 24-Oct. 1) was launched in 1982 in response to a spike in movements to censor books in schools, bookstores and libraries.
Here are just a dozen of the children's books that have come under fire over the years.
All of them are also beloved and/or very popular, and many won the highest awards in literature.
Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling
Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak
James and the Giant Peach by Road Dahl
Because of Winn Dixie by Kate DiCamillo
A LIght in the Attic by Shel Silverstein
Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck
A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle
The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien
Where's Waldo by Martin Hanford
Twilight series by Stephenie Meyer
It's that time of year again... Happy Banned Books Week!
The publisher Little, Brown Books for Young Readers is holding a Virtual Read-Out at www.bannedbooksweek.org People of all ages are encouraged to create a video of themselves reading from their favorite banned or challenged book and upload it to a special YouTube Channel for Banned Books Week. Authors and other celebrities are submitting videos as well. You'll recognize many folks whose works have been recognized and recommended by readergirlz, including Laini Taylor, Sarah Dessen, Lauren Myracle, Jay Asher, and Judy Blume.
We hope you'll submit your video! If you do, please leave a comment with a link to your video.
What are your favorite banned or challenged books? Let us know in the comments below!
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Before I was a mother I was horrified that anyone would try to censer our society by banning books. And while I still don't believe in the practice I am more empathetic towards parents and teachers trying to protect their children. I have a fourth grader with the reading level of a seventh grader. As a writer my passion is in teen fiction but I worry about the dark, edgy and disturbing tone that haunts most teen fiction sections. It's frightening to think about the roads those dark, disturbing and therefore fascinating themes will take him.
Interesting how many of these I've read without even knowing.
I understand, MeLisa. With six kids, I know how scary it can be to be a parent. You worry about them going against your teachings. You worry about who they'll hang out with, what they'll do, how they'll drive, who they'll date, who they'll marry, how well they'll raise their kids. In the end, I believe, they are better served by a broad view of the world though, and so by exposure to ideas that maybe I don't agree with, some of which they'll undoubtedly pick up and take for their own. But I'm proud of my kids because they have grown into young men and women who think for themselves, and who, by exposure to both the beautiful and the ugly, have learned to tell the difference, and to be able to deal with new ideas, whether they agree or not, because they are not shocked to learn that there are disagreeable ideas in their world.
I'm going to save this list. The ones I've read on it really are some of my favorite books. It makes me want to read the rest of them (besides Stephen King, I don't like being scared or grossed out).