Pages

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Maureen Johnson Confesses to Being a Dangerous Person


I AM A VERY DANGEROUS PERSON is the title of a recent entry on Maureen Johnson's web log.

She had received an email from Ninja Librarian Susan Hunt of the Bartlesville, Oklahoma school district, where a challenge to Maureen Johnson's The Bermudez Triangle,a Young Adult novel, was made on March 4, 2007. The committee reconsidering the novel informed Susan Hunt that the decision had been made to pull the book from the library. Apparently in 19 years, this is the first book that has raised objections.

Says Johnson,
Well, well, well. Looks like I went and got myself banned! Apparently I have written something so dangerous that it can’t be contained on the shelf of a high school library.

This was the letter that started it all:
I’m shocked and appalled at the lack of discretion, and moral decline in the selection of books at the Mid-High library. Homosexual content, unprotected sex, underage drinking, and reckless promiscuity are not values that belong in a school library. I understand there are parents or teens who are dealing with these issues, but not all parents want their kids exposed to this material. Personally, I would not endorse any of these types of book as “14-and-15-year-old-friendly.” Giving teenagers knowledge without guidance is irresponsible and dangerous. As a parent, I screen my 15-year-old’s television, Internet, video game, magazines, and books. There are things she’s not mature enough to handle, or are simply wrong for her. Parents are a child’s best line of defense in a world that rushes to grow them up too soon. This book, “The Bermudez Triangle” has no moral fiber, and wrongly promotes a “do whomever you want to discover yourself” mentality. There’s no mention of the myriad of diseases, pregnancy, destruction of friendships and lives that are very real consequences of a “sexual free-for-all” decision. I ask that his material be removed at once. You have a responsibility to the children at school to protect them and educate them. Let’s raise the bar a little higher, respect moral values and a parent’s right to guard that which has been entrusted to their care.

Johnson maintains that there is no sex in the book, but there is kissing. Says the author,
No moral fiber? Really? I beg to differ. The book is entirely about what happens to friendships when relationships enter the picture. That is, in fact, the whole book. Since there is no sex in it (just some kissing), pregnancy is not really an issue.

She explains that her mother who wouldn't let her wear denim skirts and still tells her that the stork brought her can't find a reason for banning the book.

I say she has joined the ranks of some excellent authors.

Read and watch author John Green's take on the banning on his "Brotherhood 2.0" blog.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Flat Stanley Once Banned But Carries on in Literacy Campaign

The story of Flat Stanley by Jeff Brown came out in the early 1960s and according to an article about the delightful world of Flat Stanley, it vanished from libraries and bookstores for a brief time, banned because adults thought children would find the idea of the bulletin board falling and flattening Stanley too disturbing for children.

Now, in his 40s, Flat Stanley lives on with the Flat Stanley Project, an ongoing international literacy campaign launched in 1995 by Canadian schoolteacher, Dale Hubert, who taught third-grade in London, Ontario. According to Wikipedia, the Flat Stanley Project is meant to facilitate letter-writing by schoolchildren to each other as they document what Flat Stanley has done with them. Dale Hubert received the Prime Minister's Award for Teaching Excellence in 2001 for the Flat Stanley Project."

Monday, April 30, 2007

Reporting on the Challenge April 30, 2007

Take the "Banned Book Challenge" along with another 153 people, including the people listed below, who have pledged to read over 1616 books in the Banned Book Challenge.

jasacat, USA, 20
mqoslit, USA, 6
Dewey, USA, 3
earohn, USA, 25

Take the "Banned Book Challenge" yourself. Register and set your goal, submit a completed title, and let us know when you have completed the challenge. The challenge runs until June 30, 2007.

See the comments below for titles that have been submitted.