Contents of blog copyright Book Dragon's Lair 2009-2023
I've been gone a while. I started reading fanfiction to escape and I got sucked in an abyss.

I have no idea if someone else is hosting similar challenges. I just grabbed some of what I have hosted before.

Here's to a happy year of great reading
Jan2023: Not much has changed. Writing a fanfiction now O_o as well as reading but I bought 7 new books in December and hope to get those read soon. Crossing fingers about adding challenges (late!)
Showing posts with label BBW2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBW2011. Show all posts

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Homosexuality: And Tango makes Three

And Tango Makes Three tops the ALA's 2006 Most Challenged Book List. Gee, the book was published in April of 2005 so it didn't take long at all for people to get in an uproar. The problem? Homosexuality.

This is a 32-page picture book about a real-life happening. How can you possibly debate the validity of the book when it is FACT? I like what the school librarian did at my children's elementary school. She filed it under "Penguin" instead of with the rest of the picture books. That way some 5-year-old's parents wouldn't get blind-sided with a conversation before they're ready for it but a kid interested in penguins would have access to it.

The book also made #4 on the Top 100 Banned/Challenged Books: 2000-2009. The Harry Potter series was #1.


And Tango makes Three
by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson

Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
April 26, 2005
32 pages

reading level: ages 4 - 8

Two male penguins in New York City Central Park Zoo hatch an egg. Yes, two males. The book is cute but simplistic. It is a "picture book" geared for kindergarten and I can see why some parent's are in an uproar. I also don't see what the big deal is. Male and female Chintrap penguins look the same so if you see a couple, there is no way to tell it is male/male. The two boys did all the mating rituals that the other couples did, there is no way the zookeeper could have been mistaken.

You can only assume that the pair stayed together through more than one breeding season, otherwise why would they try to hatch a rock. Only after seeing the boys try this, did the zookeeper help. He gave the pair an unhatched egg from another couple that did not do well when taking care of two eggs. He DID NOT take another couple's egg from them, but instead relieved them of having to care for two eggs and possibly losing both.

Full color, short & simplistic, looks to be a bit bigger then legal size paper. I don't know what kind of media happened during/after the hatching, but really, no matter what your view on this is, the penguins are together, the zookeeper did a good thing and baby Tango survived when maybe she would not have. We should not throw away our children (the egg) when there is another option for them.


copyright Book Dragon's Lair 2009-2011

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Drug Use: James and the Giant Peach

#56 on the Top 100 during 1990-1999. Drug use wasn't the only reason, just the shortest ;)
Other reasons include: not appropriate reading material for young children; promotes the use of drugs (tobacco, snuff) and whiskey; encourages children to disobey their parents and other adults. Plus the parents are eaten at the beginning of the book. Not just killed but eaten! That's too scary for a 7-year-old! Please.


Read it, enjoy it, celebrate 50 years! Follow that Peach



James and the Giant Peach
Roald Dahl, author
Quentin Blake, illustrator

This edition -
publisher: Puffin Books
release date: August 16, 2007
format: paperback
pages: 160



James and the Giant Peach starts by telling us how wonderful James’ life was by the sea. He "lived peacefully with his mother and father in a beautiful house beside the sea. There were always plenty of other children for him to play with...It was the perfect life for a small boy."

When he was four, his parents went shopping in London were they were “eaten by an enormous angry rhinoceros which had escaped from the London Zoo”. Eaten mind you, not just killed. Leaving him to be sent to live with his aunts. So James becomes the drudge. Two aunts, many chores, no children to play with, very little play time, no toys, no leaving the garden, sometimes no food. And he meets a man with magic. And the songs?

A Gnu and a Gnocerous surely you'll see And that gnormous and gnorrible Gnat Whose sting when it stings you goes in at the knee and comes out through the top of your hat.

Yes, I can see where people would complain, it sounds just like a Disney movie. (by the way, that was sarcasm)


Mr. Dahl's first stories were written for his own children. Can you see him in a comfortable chair with his children and maybe a neighbor or two sitting on the floor in front of him? I'm sure he slapped his hands on the chair and bounced, just a bit, when the peach ran over James' aunts leaving them "ironned out upon the grass as flat and thin and lifeless as a couple of paper dolls cut out of a picture book."

Mr. Dahl died in 1990. The edition that I have was published in 2007. That is the extent of his popularity. May it live on forever.


copyright Book Dragon's Lair 2009-2011

Monday, September 26, 2011

Unsuitable for age group: The Perks of being a Wallflower

But I thought it was about high school kids? Why can't high school kids read it? The Perks of being a Wallflower is "designated as 4th grade reading level by the widely used comprehension-assessment software Accelerated Reader". Okay, I do have a problem with this book being in an elementary school library but some of our high school students read at this level and I have no problem with it being in the high school library....even middle school! I'm sorry if you don't like part of the book but I've read it. It is life. Arizona seeks banning based on one complaint of one page.




Perks debut on ALA's Top 10 list is at #5 in 2004 and is in the Top 10 again in 2006, 2007, 2008 and 2009. It make the Top 100, at #10 for the decade, 2000-2009.



The Perks of being a Wallflower
Stephen Chbosky
An Original Publication of MTV Books/Pocket Books
February 1999
213 pages

my library copy is smaller than trade size at 7 x 5.


According to the American Library Association, more than 400 books were challenged in 2007. This book made the Top 10 list.

Reasons: Homosexuality, Sexually Explicit, Offensive Language, Unsuited to Age Group


I'm not sure what to say about this book. Each chapter is actually a letter written to a friend by the main character, Charlie.

"August 25, 1991


Dear friend,
I am writing to you because she said you listen and understood and didn't try to sleep with that person at that party even though you could have..." and so it starts. Charlie is in High School. Remember what it was like? The awkwardness? Wanting to belong? Following along because you thought you had to? This, to me, was real. I wondered if I knew a kid like this when I went to HS.

As for the reasons for the complaints:

Homosexuality - one of Charlie's friends is gay and kisses him. I don't remember any other parts where this comes up. Maybe there was a "that guy's cute" comment or something.

Sexually Explicit - well, yea, this is high school and the kids are experimenting with rubbing and stuff. Charlie gets asked to a dance where he know the couples have sex afterwards and he asks his older sister what he needs to do and she explains, in detail, how to bring a girl to orgasm without penetration. There are mainstream romance novels out there that are much, much worse, and HS kids are reading them!

Offensive Language - isn't this a part of "life" now. It isn't any "dirtier" then mainstream movies.

Unsuited to Age Group - This is a book about high school students why shouldn't high school students read it?

Did I like it? Yes.

Would I recommend it? I'm not at the high school libraries but there were a couple of kids at the middle school I think would enjoy it, and could handle it.

Would I let my kids read it? Yes.







copyright Book Dragon's Lair 2009-2011

Sunday, September 25, 2011

Does not reflect community values: 10,000 Dresses

What community? Who's values? Not everyone conforms to society's definition of normal. What is a parent to do when their son wants to wear a dress? What do boys who want to wear dresses read? 10,000 Dresses! When push comes to shove, this book is about accepting who you are (when others don't) and being true to yourself.

I didn't see it at ala.org but I have seen it on other banned/challenged lists, I just can't remember where!





10,000 Dresses
Marcus Ewert
Illustrations by Rex Ray

Seven Stories Press
Nov 1, 2008Ages 4-8
32 pages

source: I checked this book out of the library.

amazon product description:
Every night, Bailey dreams about magical dresses: dresses made of crystals and rainbows, dresses made of flowers, dresses made of windows…Unfortunately, when Bailey’s awake, no one wants to hear about these beautiful dreams. Quite the contrary: “You’re a BOY!” Mother and Father tell Bailey. “You shouldn’t be thinking about dresses at all.” Then Bailey meets Laurel, an older girl who is touched and inspired by Bailey’s imagination and courage. In friendship, the two of them begin making dresses together. And Bailey becomes the girl she always dreamed she’d be!


My Thoughts:
Gay. Lesbian. Bi. Transgender. Transgender? This is a great book for the kid who doesn't quite feel like everyone thinks they should.

This is a cute book. Bold colors, big graphics. Interesting dresses although we only "see" three of them. It's creative, simplistic and goes right to the point. Stay true to your self. I loved it but I wanted more!

copyright Book Dragon's Lair 2009-2011

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Bookbanning in America: Who & Why

A California school district removes the Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary from Shelves. A child (bored?) came across the definition of "oral sex" in the dictionary which prompted a parent complaint and instead of purchasing the children's version of the dictionary for the elementary schools, "is forming a committee of principals, teachers and parents to pore over the book and determine whether it's fit for young eyes. It could take a while: the unabridged edition available online contains over 470,000 entries."

Some good news.... a banned book is being returned to the shelves! Mark Twain wrote a book in 1905 titled Eve's Diary. It was banned because trustee Frank Wakefield objected to nude illustrations of Eve. The Charlton Public Library's trustees this week unanimously voted to return the book to circulation, reversing the board's 1906 decision.

If you're gay and don't want to be...good luck finding a book to help you. A Chicago-based group says they can't give away their books on homosexuality can be "reversed".

The American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression has a page of stories behind some past book bans and challenges, here

An interesting resource is banned books project.

Powell's Books invites you to celebrate your freedom to read with a great list broken down by category....Children's Books, Young Adult, Parenting, etc.

edit: Another great link is Bonnie's blog Banned Books




Title: Bookbanning in America: Who bans books? And Why?
author: William Noble

publisher: Paul S. Eriksson
ISBN: 9780839710806
hardcover
349 pages
categories: Literary Studies: General, Ethical Issues: Censorship, Politics & Government, Freedom of Information, Freedom of Speech

Description:
Censorship has bedeviled free expression in the United States from the time of the Pilgrims. This book reveals how and why it happens, in spite of the First Amendment. Through dramatisation, anecdotes, interviews and actual trial transcripts, it shows how censorship affects politics, religion, social status, education and publishing.


Yikes! It was an extremely scary read. It really is easy to have a book banned. My eyes have been opened to who and I've discovered that the state with the highest recorded challenges is....California. What? My bias is showing because I thought it would be a more poor, less-educated state. Dang. It really does take all kinds and I ashamed of my bias. I think the worse thing is that my librarian didn't know this kind of thing was still going on.

My take on chapter one with lots of quotes and commentary

What do you do if your child comes home from school with an assigned book that they are uncomfortable reading? I would go to the school and ask if there was an alternative. This is exactly what LaDone Hills did and after sending a written request to the teacher, an alternative books was assigned. That should have been the end of the matter but Ms. Hills did something else. She felt concern for other students and "began to pursue a way to get such materials removed from our educational program."

Notice that she has already taken care of her own child but still feels it is her right to take care of ours!

At a school board meeting the question is asked, "Are there any other items?" This question is asked at the end of a meeting where people where hoping to get home early and should have been a formality before closing the meeting. Not so in this case. Mr. Shelton "was the most unpredictable of all the board members because he operated more independently. He was not noted for origination action, but he had the capacity for dominating the plan or agenda of someone else. His education was limited, though he was skilled in his work with heavy machinery. Everyone knew his general nature could be frosty and uncompromising."

Mr. Shelton wanted to know why this book was being taught at the high school. "I looked through some of it, and it would not be acceptable to most of you."

Wait a minute? Looked through some of it? You mean you haven't read it?

Passages were read and a vote was taken. Never mind that the principal of the school in question reminded everyone that there were procedures in place, the school board skipped all that and, against the advice of their attorney, voted to have the book removed from the school district.

Forty percent of county residences are represented by a single committee, The Graves County Baptist Association. It didn't take long for this committee of 82 to take action, after all "it was a moral issue". They had a member write a letter, on association letterhead, in SUPPORT of the banning.

At least the man read the book! Too bad he found it "dull, uninteresting, hardly representative of what a Nobel Prize winner should write." That's right. Nobel. Prize. Winner.

The phrase "all hell breaks loose" should fit what happens in this county quite well. People are outraged that the banning took place. People are supportive of the board. Teachers feel they they have been thrown to the wolves. The ACLU gets involved.

There is a happy ending in that the banning was rescinded but still. It should have been a simple "my child is uncomfortable reading this book, may another be assigned". The whole lesson was supposed to be on stream-of-conciousness writing and this was the best example.

Oh, I never did mention the book did I? As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner. I didn't see it on ALA's Top 100 list for 1990-1999 or 2000-2009 but it was #19 on the banned and/or challenged classics list.




copyright Book Dragon's Lair 2009-2011

Welcome to Banned Books Week


Happy Saturday Everyone!

This "week" will be a little different around the lair. I'm starting off on Saturday with the start of Banned Books Week. Sheila over at Book Journey is going all out for Banned Books Week. I have a soft spot for banned books and have several reviews and soapbox type posts in my archives. This week I'm dragging them out again. With commentary.

from an ALA newsletter: "Banned Books Week is sponsored by the American Booksellers Association; the American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression; the American Library Association; the Association of American Publishers, the American Society of Journalists and Authors, and the National Association of College Stores. It is endorsed by the Library of Congress Center for the Book. In 2011, the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund; National Coalition Against Censorship; national Council of Teachers of English; and PEN American Center also signed on as sponsors."

Let's start with The Difference between Banned and Challenged. From an article at ALA.org: "A challenge is an attempt to remove or restrict materials, based upon the objections of a person or group. A banning is the removal of those materials. Challenges do not simply involve a person expressing a point of view; rather, they are an attempt to remove material from the curriculum or library, thereby restricting the access of others. Due to the commitment of librarians, teachers, parents, students and other concerned citizens, most challenges are unsuccessful and most materials are retained in the school curriculum or library collection."

Scary thought....did you see that MOST challenges are unsuccessful? That's great but it means that some are successful. We must fight this!

Don't forget to visit Sheila!

copyright Book Dragon's Lair 2009-2011
Disclaimer

In accordance to the FTC guidelines, I must state that I make no monetary gains from my reviews or endorsements here on Book Dragon's Lair. All books I review are either borrowed, purchased by me, given as a gift, won in some kind of contest, or received in exchange for an honest review.