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'Gender Queer' tops library group's list of challenged books

A new report says books with LGBTQ+ themes remain the most complained about at public schools and libraries around the country

Hillel Italie
Monday 24 April 2023 06:06 EDT

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With Florida legislators barring even the mention of being gay in classrooms and similar restrictions under consideration in other states, a report released Monday says books with LGBTQ+ themes remain the most likely targets of bans or attempted bans at public schools and libraries around the country.

The American Library Association announced that Maia Kobabeā€™s graphic memoir ā€œGender Queerā€ was the most ā€œchallengedā€ book of 2022, the second consecutive year it has topped the list.

The ALA defines a challenge as a ā€œformal, written complaint filed with a library or school requesting that materials be removed because of content or appropriateness.ā€

Other books facing similar trials include George M. Johnsonā€™s ā€œAll Boys Arenā€™t Blue,ā€ Mike Curatoā€™s ā€œFlamer,ā€ Stephen Chboskyā€™s ā€œThe Perks of Being a Wallflower,ā€ John Greenā€™s ā€œLooking for Alaska,ā€ Jonathan Evisonā€™s ā€œLawn Boyā€ and Juno Dawsonā€™s ā€œThis Book Is Gay.ā€

ā€œAll the challenges are openly saying that young people should not be exposed to LGBTQ materials,ā€ said Deborah Caldwell-Stone, who directs the ALAā€™s Office for Intellectual Freedom.

The list also includes Toni Morrisonā€™s first novel, the 1970 release ā€œThe Bluest Eye,ā€ which has been criticized for its references to rape and incest; Sherman Alexieā€™s ā€œThe Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indianā€ (sexual content, profanity) and Sarah J. Maasā€™ ā€œA Court of Mist and Furyā€ (sexual content).

The ALA usually compiles a Top 10 list, but this year expanded it to 13 because the books ranked 10 to 13 were in a virtual tie.

ā€œIn the past, when it was that close, we would flip a coin to see who got in the list. This year, we got rid of the coin,ā€ Caldwell-Stone said.

The ALA last month reported there were more than 1,200 complaints in 2022 involving more than 2,500 different books, the highest totals since the association began compiling complaints 20 years ago. The number is likely much higher because the ALA relies on media reports and accounts from libraries.

In charts accompanying Mondayā€™s announcement, the ALA reported the majority of complaints ā€” nearly 60% ā€” come from parents and library patrons. ā€œPolitical/religiousā€ groups such as the conservative Moms for Liberty account for just 17% of complaints, but they object to a disproportionate number of books, according to Caldwell-Stone. Moms for Liberty, which advocates for parental rights in schools, objected to more than 1,000 books in 2022.

Caldwell-Stone cited the web site booklooks.org, a popular resource for conservatives to evaluate books that defines itself as ā€œunaffiliatedā€ with Moms for Liberty, but does ā€œcommunicate with other individuals and groups with whom there is an intersection of mission and values.ā€

ā€œMany of the books on our most challenged list appear on booklooks,ā€ Caldwell-Stone said.

The ALA list followed last weekā€™s report from PEN America, which found a continued rise in book bans at public schools during the first half of the 2022-2023 academic year.

According to PEN, there were 1,477 individual book bans affecting 874 different titles, up from 1,149 bans in the second half of 2021-2022. ā€œGender Queerā€ and ā€œFlamerā€ tied at 15 for the most times banned during the more recent period, with other frequently banned books including ā€œThe Bluest Eye," ā€œA Court of Mist and Furyā€ and a graphic novel edition of Margaret Atwood's dystopian ā€œThe Handmaid's Tale.ā€

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