book banning

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FREAD09smThis week is Banned Book Week, a moment when libraries, bookstores and readers stop and pay attention to the fact that reading what we chose is a right that must be protected.  Challenges to books are widespread, over 500 were reported last year, and occur across the nation.  Previously we posted about the activities centered around Banned Book Week. 

A couple of years ago, my son entered an essay contest during Banned Book Week advocating the importance of books like The Perks of a Wallflowerby Stephen Chbosky.  He won the contest!  Here is his essay, my favorite part is when he points out that it is better to learn some things through a book rather than by experience:

The challenging of Stephen Choboskys’ novel, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, is unwarranted because the book accurately talks about issues that plague teens everywhere.  Before reading the novel over the weekend, I did not know about the different actual effects of drugs like LSD and pot, and under what circumstances they would do such damaging things.  The character Charlie is well developed in his correspondence to the unknown recipient. The reader gets the sense that they can understand why Charlie would smoke and do drugs.  It was a real eye opener to me, and the novel was an insight into what desperate and ignorant teens actually do.  Charlie’s friends, including Patrick, Sam, and his sister are not portrayed as perfect characters, but they always are there when Charlie needs them, and they are very real in the sense that they talk about their place in the world and make big and small mistakes.

Many people would miss out on the education about sex, drugs, and alcohol that no teen will learn in health class in school.  Besides, if teens don’t learn this way, the other way to learn is to actually experiment with the substances, which is generally illegal.  When you take away books like these, you take away the safe learning of teens that would otherwise damage themselves for a long time afterwards.  I did not know about this side of teen culture before reading this book, and now I have a better view of what actually happens when you smoke, drink, or do drugs. Do not ban this book.

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#amazonfail

While I was celebrating Easter on Sunday and working on my Internet connectivity on Monday, a storm was brewing about Amazon’s inexplicable deranking of several books, many in the gay and lesbian genre.  This made the books harder to find and buy.  For example, the NYT reported today that the effected books included “James Baldwin’s “Giovanni’s Room,” the gay romance novel “Transgressions” and “Unfriendly Fire,” a recently published book about the government’s policies on gays in the military.”  After an avalanche of protest via Twitter and calls for a boycott of Amazon, it responded yesterday by saying that “an embarrassing and ham-fisted cataloging error” caused over 57,000 books to lose their sales ranking, many of the books on health and reproductive medicine.

indieIndependent Bookstores Give Voice and Variety

How and why this mistake occurred is still unknown.  “Ham-fisted” doesn’t explain what happened, it just describes it as bumbling which is news to no one.  One implication is clear to  me, this fiasco demonstrates the importance of independent bookstores.  When a giant megaphone dominates the marketplace, some voices can be excluded and effectively silenced. Almost always those voices are outside the mainstream.  Independent bookstores are the holders of small megaphones looking for the different opinions that society needs to hear. 

Powell’s response to #amazonfail:  in the spirit of our freedom to buy any book, Powell’s is offering a 20% discount on all internet orders over $20, just enter code #powellswin by 11:59 (PST) on April 16, 2009

We don’t need independent bookstores to tell us about James Patterson’s new book (although they need us to buy them for those easy sales), what is a necessity for a healthy society is a place for unknown authors, quirky books and controversial topics to thrive.  Otherwise, our world becomes very vanilla and knowledge of the world we live in diminishes. Read the rest of this entry »

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Here at bookstorepeople.com, Kim and I love when people contact us with worthy book-related causes they want to bring to the attention of our readership.  Rachael Holley, an intern at ABFFE (The American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression), asked us to help her spread the word about Banned Books Week.  Although it won’t take place until the fall, it’s crucial to start planning your involvement early, as Rachael explains below.  We will, of course, remind everyone when Banned Books Week arrives.  The rest of this post is Rachael’s:

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. The Catcher in the Rye. Harry Potter.

Every one of these books is a literary treasure, and yet as recently as 2008 these books have been challenged for “offensive language, racism, sexuality, and anti-religious viewpoints.” What if you and your kids couldn’t read about your favorite Wizard at the public library? Or your local high school banned Mark Twain from its curriculum?

This year, take a stand against censorship. Join the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE) and the American Library Association (ALA) in celebrating Banned Books Week 2009. From September 26 to October 3, independent bookstores across the country can host events, displays, and speakers that promote anti-censorship and raise awareness about the reality of book banning in the United States.

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