September 27, 2008...3:56 pm

Personal Banned Books Week Challenge: A book a day

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In honor of Banned Books Week 2008, which starts today and runs through next Saturday, Oct. 4., I am issuing a challenge to myself and anyone who would like to join me: to read a banned or challenged book a day for the next eight days with a brief review to follow. For ideas, I highly encourage these two lists put out by the American Library Association:

  1. Top 100 Banned/Challenged Books in 2000-2007
  2. The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books in 1990-1999

Personally, here are the ones I’ve chosen:

bannedbooks

I used mostly selections from this poster of Books Challenged or Banned in 2007-08, with three out of the eight singled out by a group known as Livingston Organization for Values in Education, or LOVE, who issued a challenge to several books in a Michigan high school to the county prosecutor, who struck down all of the challenges in one fell swoop:

After reading the books in question, it is clear that the explicit passages illustrated a larger literary, artistic, or political message and were not included solely to appeal to the prurient interests of minors. Whether these materials are appropriate for minors is a decision to be made by the school board, but I find that they are not in violation of the criminal laws.

And here is my schedule of when I will be reading them:

  1. Saturday: Slaughterhouse-Five by Kurt Vonnegut: I believe I read this years ago, but it’s been so long and I would like to reread it. One of the four LOVE books.
  2. Sunday: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone by J.K. Rowling: Amazingly, I haven’t read the Harry Potter series. I chose this one for Sunday, in special honor of St. Joseph School in Wakefield, Mass. which removed the book from its library in 2007 because the themes of witchcraft and sorcery were inappropriate for a Catholic school.
  3. Monday: The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton: This is the only one that is not off the 2007-08 list and instead is off the top 100 most frequently challenged books of 1990-2000 (see link above), where it rests at No. 42. I read this when in high school, but will also qualify for a new feature I’m doing called Monday’s Memory, where I will review a book from my youth.
  4. Tuesday: The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier: This book continues to make almost all lists, and I think when I was in high school, students in another section read it, but I never did.
  5. Wednesday: The Giver by Lois Lowry: Like Cormier’s book, this continues to make a lot of lists.
  6. Thursday: Black Boy by Richard Wright: Another LOVE selection.
  7. Friday: Running with Scissors by Augusten Burrough: Yet another LOVE selection.
  8. I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou: which was challenged in the state in which I live, Pennsylvania, in Mannheim Township schools near Lancaster.


Others whom I know are doing similar challenges:

If you also are doing something related to Banned Books Week, add a link to your blog specific post in the comments and join the three of us (at least three, if not more) in the fun.

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