Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2023 Challenge - Regular
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18 - A Book That Was Banned or Challenged in 2022
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Melissa
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Jan 26, 2023 05:20AM

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I saw someone post this book on TikTok and thought it would be good, especially since it's now Black History Month. To be honest, I had completely forgotten I had this one for a minute because I had it in a section of my books that I rarely visit.
Definitely going with this one:
Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You
(it's been banned from 2020 through 2022)

Simon vs. the Homosapien Agenda
Cinderella is Dead
Fun Home
Girl Made of Stars
Felix Ever After
Gaby, Lost and Found
The House on Mango Street
Little & Lion
Class Act
The Miseducation of Cameron Post

Speak is my all-time favorite book (and yes, out of the over 500 books I've read in my life, I can choose a favorite.) I know it's been on banned book lists for years but to continue to see it there and continue to see states... I just can't take it so it indeed calls for a re-read.
I just started reading The Magic Fish and YOU GUYS THIS BOOK IS GORGEOUS!!! This book has got it ALL!
1) story of an immigrant family from Vietnam - mom is learning English, so she and son read together so she can learn.
2) A coming out story - the son is gay and struggles to tell his mom (because he doesn't know the Vietnamese words to explain).
3) FAIRY TALES - the books they read together are fairy tales!
4) Absolutely gorgeous art.
5) Fantastic and thoughtful author notes at the end talking about the deeper meaning of some themes.
It's been banned and/or challenged in a bunch of places, presumably because some people think reading books about gay kids will allow other kids to realize they are also gay. The horrors. I was talking to my daughter about this. She confirmed that she did not know what "gay" meant until 5th grade when some kids explained to her (which doesn't make total sense since when she was in K or 1st, a little boy in her class who lived down the block had two moms - so she definitely knew about the possibility - maybe I just never used the word "gay" or I didn't explain to her that some people think being gay is wrong or weird, because why would I say that). BUT before that time, she just assumed that EVERYONE was queer like her (and that is absolutely the cutest image for me now).
1) story of an immigrant family from Vietnam - mom is learning English, so she and son read together so she can learn.
2) A coming out story - the son is gay and struggles to tell his mom (because he doesn't know the Vietnamese words to explain).
3) FAIRY TALES - the books they read together are fairy tales!
4) Absolutely gorgeous art.
5) Fantastic and thoughtful author notes at the end talking about the deeper meaning of some themes.
It's been banned and/or challenged in a bunch of places, presumably because some people think reading books about gay kids will allow other kids to realize they are also gay. The horrors. I was talking to my daughter about this. She confirmed that she did not know what "gay" meant until 5th grade when some kids explained to her (which doesn't make total sense since when she was in K or 1st, a little boy in her class who lived down the block had two moms - so she definitely knew about the possibility - maybe I just never used the word "gay" or I didn't explain to her that some people think being gay is wrong or weird, because why would I say that). BUT before that time, she just assumed that EVERYONE was queer like her (and that is absolutely the cutest image for me now).

Unfortunately, it would seem like it. Texas is the same way. It's absolutely insane at how all of these bans have happened within the past couple of years.
There have always been banned books, sure, but these past couple of years...it infuriates me to no end.

I won't be adding it for this prompt since I'm already reading Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You , though I still have plans to read 'Caste,' but this just goes to show that you can practically find any book on banned books list these days.


Kindred's gotta be banned in Florida: it's about slavery. And it's such a great book, perfectly illustrating how an oppressive system warps the soul, as a once open-hearted child grows into a selfish, cruel enslaver.

1) story of an immigrant family from Vietnam - mom is learning English, so she..."
I heard about that book a while ago because it was mentioned in an article that was about how many authors don't get recognized when they get banned and that book was an example.
Jennifer W wrote: "Nadine in NY wrote: "I just started reading The Magic Fish and YOU GUYS THIS BOOK IS GORGEOUS!!! This book has got it ALL!
1) story of an immigrant family from Vietnam - mom is lea..."
I never came back to say I finished it, and I want to give this book ALL the stars. The way he combines fairy tales with Tien's present day experiences in the USA and his mother's past experiences in Vietnam is GENIUS. And did I mention the art is gorgeous? It's gorgeous!!
1) story of an immigrant family from Vietnam - mom is lea..."
I never came back to say I finished it, and I want to give this book ALL the stars. The way he combines fairy tales with Tien's present day experiences in the USA and his mother's past experiences in Vietnam is GENIUS. And did I mention the art is gorgeous? It's gorgeous!!

Kindred's gotta be banned in Florida: it's about slavery. And i..."
I'll check it out!


Given the content, it makes sense as to why it was banned. So unfortunate. They just keep banning books left and right, even the recently published books which is a complete shame.

Yeah and it's not just Texas. Other states are placing bans all over which is just rediculous.
*****
..."
Gaaah, looking up The 1619 Project on my local library websites and folks have wrote entire books 'debunking' it. Furious that there's an audience for such claptrap.

I read that conservatives in some school districts in Texas have used the book bans to help bring rally support and attracted unprecedented money to win school board seats campaigning under the promise to clear out “pornographic” materials from schools. This is in the midst of continuing Republican-led political fights over how issues related to race, gender, and sex are allowed to be taught in public schools.

Honestly that doesn't surprise me.
*****
Jennifer wrote: Gaaah, looking up The 1619 Project on my local library websites and folks have wrote entire books 'debunking' it. Furious that there's an audience for such claptrap
That's insane. It's no different than using the book An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States for Young People which is also banned for the content of critical race theory and marxism and considered revisionist history all because it talks about settler colonialism.
I do want to read The 1619 Project at some point. It's so long of a book that I have a hard time keeping track of it.
I am reading the Indigenous one though and I can see why those...people...would believe all of the things they do.
Personally, the Indigenous People's book is one I wish I had read in school. It tells the truth of what happened. All I learned was a few paragraphs of indigenous people here and there, they were mainly about wars, they were mainly about the Mayans and Aztecs, and the Indigenous people were often vilified.

I've read several of the books on your list, and they were all wonderful. I have lots of theories why they've been added to the banned book lists, but I think you'll enjoy them! :)

Thank you, reading community, for making a point of reading those books <3

https://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/b...

https://www.ala.org/advocacy/bbooks/..."
I read the NPR article about that. It's absolutely insane.

The top ten most banned books of the 2021-2022 school year.
1. Gender Queer: A Memoir by Maia Kobabe (41 bans)
2. All Boys Aren't Blue by George M. Johnson (29 bans)
3. Out of Darkness by Ashley Hope Pérez (24 bans)
4. The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison (22 bans)
5 (tie). The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas (17 bans)
5 (tie). Lawn Boy by Jonathan Evison (17 bans)
7. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie (16 bans)
8. Me and Earl and the Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews (14 bans)
9 (tie). Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher (12 bans)
9 (tie). The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini (12 bans)
9 (tie) l8r, g8r by Lauren Myracle (12 bans)
9 (tie). The Crank Series 1-6 by Ellen Hopkins (12 bans)


My latest is going to be Shout






I've read plenty of BIPOC books so I want to read a nonfiction that is different than those.

Shout
The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story
I just wish that The 1619 Project would be published in paperback already. It would make it so much easier.
*Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West (this wasn't banned in 2022), but it has been on the banned books list before)*

Gender Queer: A Memoir
Flamer
Tricks
The Handmaid's Tale: The Graphic Novel
Crank
Sold
Push
A Court of Mist and Fury
This Book Is Gay
The Bluest Eye
milk and honey
https://pen.org/report/banned-in-the-...

I went through the entire PEN America list (37 pgs worth, over 500 books) and it was slightly shocking to see Fangirl on the list. How can a book on generalized and social anxiety disorder be considered a banned or challenged book?!
There is nothing in that book to suggest anything worth banning unless you want to ban mental health issues which they are clear on doing too it seems.

I went through the entire PEN America list (37 pgs worth, over 500 books) and it was slightly shocking to see Fangirl on ..."
Sadly Fangirl is probably banned because the main character writes Harry/Draco fanfiction.

https://uniteagainstbookbans.org/righ...

Gender Queer
All Boys Aren't Blue
The Bluest Eye
Flamer
Looking for Alaska
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
Lawn Boy
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
Out of Darkness
Count of Mist and Fury
Crank
Me and Earl and the Dying Girl
This Book is Gay
I don't know why ALA and PEN have different books; the methodologies of how they calculate their most banned lists. ALA does include why each of these books were banned, if you're curious, though if you're familiar with the book in a general sense, you can probably guess.
https://www.ala.org/news/press-releas...

Oh, you're totally right! I completely forgot about that part of the story. It's not that I bypassed it, it's just that no big deal to me that I didn't think to consider it because of the LGBTQ+ ship. You know that stuff has just become the norm. You'd think I would have remembered though. Thanks for that.
*****
Even though there are a lot of banned books to choose from for this prompt (unfortunately), I've read quite a few so I'm thinking of going with The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story

I'm not surprised to see several of the ones I've read on the list.
*****
I don't know why ALA and PEN have different books; the methodologies of how they calculate their most banned lists. ALA does include why each of these books were banned, if you're curious, though if you're familiar with the book in a general sense, you can probably guess.
From what I'm noticing of the two is that PEN has it broken down by state. ALA is more generalized.
*****
Between ALA and PEN, I prefer the PEN list because they have so much more titles (is that a good thing or a bad thing?). So many of the books that are on the ALA are often on those lists from previous years so there's nothing new to pay attention to.


https://www.latimes.com/entertainment...

Yeah, I saw that too. It's rediculous. I mean it was an inauguration poem about hope and prosperity and they want it banned? It makes no sense.

Thank you for sharing. Looks like a reason for me to buy Ms. Gorman's book. ;)

I believe it was only the King James version that was removed. Other versions were acceptable.

I've heard it was all editions of the Bible that were removed. Either way since people complain too much, all the more reason to keep it off banned books list. It's a bunch of hypocrites that are banning these things, Bible's too. It's a...(I won't cuss) that it's "about the kids". If that were true they would be protecting them from far worse things that words on pages.
Don't get me started on the topic of banned books so I'll just stop here.
Teri wrote: "Someone in a school district in my state went through the removal process for The Bible. They recommended the removal mostly to show how ridiculous the new regulations are about library books, clai..."
There is SO MUCH sex and violence in the Bible. If these folks are banning books for sex or violence, then yeah, the Bible has got to go. I mean, I don't even know how many stories there are about rape and gang rape, but it's more than I can easily count.
There is SO MUCH sex and violence in the Bible. If these folks are banning books for sex or violence, then yeah, the Bible has got to go. I mean, I don't even know how many stories there are about rape and gang rape, but it's more than I can easily count.
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