Banned Books List: 2008 to 2009
The American Library Association is celebrating banned books week (September 26–October 3, 2009) with a long list of books banned in the last year: BOOKS CHALLENGED & BANNED IN 2008-2009: Speak.Read.Know. The purpose of this awareness campaign is to “celebrate the freedom to choose and the freedom to express one’s opinion, even if that opinion might be considered unpopular or unorthodox. The campaign stresses the importance of ensuring the availability of those viewpoints to all who wish to read them.”
The list includes some amusing entries, which I’ll link to below. Included are both great American classics and innocuous modern hits.
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The Joy of Sex by Alex Comfort
Restricted minors’ access in the Topeka and Shawnee County, Kans. Public Library (2009) because a group contended that the material is “harmful to minors under state law.” |
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The New Joy of Sex by Alex Comfort
Challenged at the Nampa, Idaho Public Library (2005) along with seven other books because “they are very pornographic in nature and they have very explicit and detailed illustrations and photographs which we feel don’t belong in a library.” The library board approved policy changes that restrict children’s access to any holdings that may fall under the state’s harmful to minors statute and barred the library from buying movies rated NC-17 or X. |
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The Day After Tomorrow by Robert A Heinlein
Removed from the Beardstown, Ill. High School library (2008). A parent requested its removal and a committee determined the novel “rather very adult in nature” and, because the library already had a large selection of other valuable science fiction and spy literature, the committee elected to remove the book from the high school’s circulation and donated it to the public library. |
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Brave New World by Aldous Huxley
Retained in the Coeur D’Alene, Idaho School District (2008) despite objections that the book has too many references to sex and drug use. |
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To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
Retained in the English curriculum by the Cherry Hill, N.J. Board of Education (2007). A resident had objected to the novel’s depiction of how blacks are treated by members of a racist white community in an Alabama town during the Depression. The resident feared the book would upset black children reading it. |
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The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman
Retained by the publicly funded Dufferin-Peel Catholic School District in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada (2008) with a sticker on the inside cover telling readers “representations of the church in this novel are purely fictional and are not reflective of the real Roman Catholic Church or the Gospel of Jesus Christ.” |
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Twilight Series by Stephenie Meyer
Removed from and later reinstated in the middle school libraries of the Capistrano, Calif. Unified School District (2008). The books were initially ordered removed by the district’s instructional materials specialist, who ordered that the books be moved from middle school to high school collections. That order was rescinded and the books remain in the middle school libraries. Challenged at the Brockbank Junior High in Magna, Utah (2009), by a parent over sexual content in the Mormon author’s fourth novel, Breaking Dawn. |
I’m looking forward to see what foolish conservatives, religious nuts, and other assorted groups of close-minded individuals try to ban next year. As usual, the rule on banned books is “if you don’t want to read it, no one is forcing you to check it out!”
Ernest Hemingway Action Figure
Found via Halloween kook: Baseball guy on Flickr, this is a hilarious action figure of literary figure Ernest Hemingway. Is it a DIY/MAKE or is it a production model?
This is a one-of-a-kind prototype of a 12″ action figure (doll) of Ernest Hemingway. It comes with a typewriter and a shotgun. A child can roleplay, pretending to roam in Africa, fish in Cuba, hunt in Michigan, and write the great American Novel. Much more fun then GI Joe and Barbie.
Salomé in Art & Painting
Fictional character Salomé lived in Judea between AD 14 and 71. Her Hebrew name is שלומית (Shlomit) means “peace” and was used as the typical “hello” greeting of the time. According to tradition, Salome was the stepdaughter of Herod Antipas (ruler of Judea), and danced before him on his birthday. This so delighted Herod that he promised her mother a favour, which was the beheading of John the Baptist.
Christian traditions depict her as an icon of dangerous female seductiveness, for instance depicting as erotic her dance mentioned in the New Testament, or concentrate on her lighthearted and cold foolishness that, according to the gospels, led to John the Baptist’s death.
Often the subject of fine art, below I have gathered as many examples of Salomé in painting or sculpture as possible, and arranged them chronologically. If you can think of any that I’ve missed, please leave a link in the comments!

Salome with the head of John the Baptist (1488) Tempera on Panel by Sandro Botticelli







