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* Bad Books that
have been Censored *
All these books promote indecent and immoral behavior and
this is why they need to be censored.
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885)
by Mark Twain
The word
"nigger," which appears many times in the novel, was the
cause for the removal of this classic from an eighth-grade
reading list. In the 1950s, the NAACP objected to the book's
perceived racist tone. In 1984, the book was removed from a
public high school reading list in Waukegan, Illinois,
because a black alderman found the book's language
offensive.
American Heritage Dictionary (1969)
In 1978, an
Eldon, Missouri library banned the dictionary because it
contained 39 "objectionable" words. And, in 1987, the
Anchorage School Board banned the dictionary for similar
reasons, i.e., having slang definitions for words such as
"bed," "knocker," and "balls."
Andersonville (1955)
by MacKinlay
Kantor
Awarded the
Pulitzer Prize in 1956, this story of a Confederate prison
camp during the Civil War, was viciously attacked throughout
the U.S. It was banned in Amarillo, TX.
Annie on My Mind
The Olathe,
Kansas school system ordered all copies of this book removed
from high school library shelves. It is a story of two women
who meet and fall in love and struggle with declaring their
homosexuality to family and friends.
As I Lay Dying (1932)
by William
Faulkner
In 1986,
Graves County, Kentucky, the school board banned this book
about a poor white family in the midst of crisis, from its
high school English reading list because of 7 passages which
made reference to God or abortion and used curse words such
as "bastard," "goddam," and "son of a bitch." None of the
board members had actually read the book.
Atkol Video Catalog
WIRED
magazine (Feb. 1996) reported that AOL censored Atkol
Video's catalog from its virtual shopping mall for carrying
gay titles. AOL gave no censoring criteria when it "cut some
titles and retained others."
Banned From Public Radio: Humor, Commentary and Smart
Remarks Your Government DOESN'T Want You To Hear (1991)
by Michael
Graham
The title of
this first book is literally true: he was banned from the
South Carolina Educational Radio Network courtesy of those
geniuses in our General Assembly for commentary which poked
fun at their 1991 Ethics Act. Graham also has the
distinction of being the only person officially fired from
his job as communications director for SC Secretary of State
Jim Miles by an act of those same courageous geniuses.
The Book Your Church Doesn't Want You To Read (1995)
by Tim C.
Leedom, Editor
The book
traces astrological and mythical origins of modern day
western religions. A Barnes & Noble bookstore in San Diego
refused to stock this book because of its content.
Boss: Richard J. Daley of Chicago (1971)
by Mike Royko
A Ridgefield,
CT school board in 1972 banned this book from the high
school reading list, claiming it "dowgrades police
departments."
Catch 22
by Joseph
Heller
This book was
banned and/or challenged more than once. It was banned in
Srongsville, Ohio in 1972 and that decision was overturned
in 1976. It was also challenged in Dallas, Texas (1974) and
again in Snoqualmie, Washington (1979).
Catcher in the Rye (1951)
by J. D.
Salinger
This is a
perennial favorite of censors and has been banned in the
U.S. and Australia. In 1960, a Tulsa, OK teacher was fired
for putting the book on the 11th grade reading list. The
teacher was reinstated, but the book was permanently removed
from teaching programs. A Minnesota high school
administration was attacked for allowing the book in the
school library.
The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence (1974)
by Victor
Marchetti and John D. Marks
The CIA
obtained a court injunction against this book's publication
stating the author, a former CIA employee, violated his
contract which states that he cannot write about the CIA
without the agency's approval. First amendment activists
opposed this ruling, "raising the question of whether a
citizen can sign away his First Amendment rights." After
prolonged litigation, the CIA succeeded in having 168
passages deleted.
The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty
Beauty's Punishment
Beauty's Release
by Anne Rice
(under the pseudonym, A.N. Roquelaure, written in the early
1980s)
April 28,
1996, the Columbus, Ohio Dispatch reported that
following a complaint from a patron in the Columbus
Metropolitan Library removed the trilogy of Rice's Sleeping
Beauty books and their audio tapes after determining the
books were pornographic. These same books were also removed
from the Lake Lanier Regional Library system in Gwinnett
County, Georgia, in 1992.
Daddy's Roommate
by Michael
Willhoite
A favorite of
censors, this children's book about gay parenting was the
subject of a challenge in the public library. In an
all-too-familiar request, a parent complained about
references to homosexuality in material for children. The
library board voted to uphold basic library principles by
retaining the book on its appropriate shelf in the
children's section.
Deadly Deceits (My 25 Years in the CIA) (1983)
by Ralph
McGheehee
The CIA
delayed the publication of this book for three years,
objecting to 397 passages, even though much of what the
author wrote about was already public knowledge.
Decamerone
by Giovanni
Boccacio (1313-1375)
In
Cincinnati, an "expurgated" version of Boccacio's
Decamerone is confiscated in 1922. In 1926, there is an
import ban of the book by the Treasury Department. In 1927,
U.S. Customs removes parts of text from the "Ashendene
edition" and ships the mutilated copy back to me British
publisher in London. In 1932, import ban lifted in
Minnesota. In 1934, the New England Watch and Ward Society
still bans the book. In 1954, it is still on the black lis
tof the "National Organization of Decent Literature."
Dictionary of American Slang
by T.Y.
Crowell, publisher
Max Rafferty,
California superintendent of public instruction in 1963, and
his supporters found over 150 "dirty" passages in the book.
Don't Call Me Brother
by Austin
Miles
In 1992,
former Christian fundamentalist minister, Austin Miles, was
sued; charges were that his book, Don't Call Me Brother, was
"...a vitriolic attack upon organized Christianity." The $4
million lawsuit filed in Los Angeles Superior Court also
screamed "libel" and "slander." After a lengthy and costly
process, the court ruled that the book was not defamatory.
1-The Drowning of Stephan Jones
by Bette
Greene
2-The Education of Harriet Hatfield
by May Sarton
3-Maurice
by E. M.
Forster
All three of these books,
which treat homosexuality in various ways, were removed from
a regional high school. The novels' purchase was financed by
a grant that teacher Penny Culliton received and was
approved by the school superintendent and principal.
However, shortly after a local newspaper reported that
Culliton was involved with a lesbian and gay support group
for young people, the books were found unsuitable and were
banned. Maurice and The Education of Harriet Hatfield were
seized from the students while they were reading the novels
in class. Personal attacks on the teacher and demands for
her dismissal have been so vehement that her job is now in
jeopardy.
Fahrenheit 451
by Ray
Bradbury
This book is
about censorship and those who ban books for fear of
creating too much individualism and independent thought. In
late 1998, this book was removed from the required reading
list of the West Marion High School in Foxworth,
Mississippi. A parent complained of the use of the words
"God damn" in the book. Subsequently, the superintendent
instructed the the teacher to remove the book from the
required reading list.
Families
by Meredith
Tax
A young children's book that
creatively describes different family structures, was
finally removed by the Fairfax County school board. Meredith
Tax's beloved book had been under attack for a long time,
during which many individuals and organizations rose to its
defense. What's more, Families was praised by the board's
own review committees.
Flowers in the Attic
by V.C.
Andrews
The county's board of
education decided to remove all school curriculum materials
and library books containing any and all "profanity" and
"pornography," both concepts ill-defined. The tremendous
public outcry made the board backtrack and resolve to review
its selection policy. However, after this conciliatory
decision, and while the review process still inches along,
most of the books in Andrews's popular series Flowers in the
Attic were removed from the high-school library for
"pornographic" content.
Forever
by Judy Blume
Forever
censored, this wildly popular teen novel was attacked once
again for its frank treatment of adolescent sexuality and
was removed from an eighth-grade optional reading list. In
Rib Lake, Wisconsin, a school district principal had the
book removed from the library after confiscating a copy from
a student in the lunchroom, finding "graphic descriptions of
sex acts."
Freedom and Order
by Henry
Steele Commager
The U.S.
Information Agency had this book banned from its overseas
libraries because of its condemnation of American policies
in Vietnam.
From Here to Eternity
by James
Jones
This book was
censored in 1951in Holyoke, Springfield, Massachusetts and
in 1953 in Jersey City, New Jersey; blacklisted by National
Organization of Decent Literature in 1954.
The Glass Teat (1970)
by Harlan
Ellison
The Glass Teat
is a collection of essays which appeared as columns in the
Los Angeles Free Press and Rolling Stone
during the 1960s. They were critical essay on the subject of
television broadcasting; and essays critical of the
president and vice-president. The publisher, Ace Pub. Corp.
consequently recalled his book and had it removed from
bookstores. Years later it was later re-released.
Grapes of Wrath (1939)
by John
Steinbeck
Several
months after the book's publication, a St. Louis, MO library
ordered 3 copies to be burned for the vulgar words used by
its characters. It was also banned in Kansas City and in
Oklahoma.
Harry
Potter books 1-7
by J. K.
Rowling
It is
about Witches and Demons and promotes Godlessness. Although it
is banned in Schools the series is still one of the biggest
selling book series in the world selling over a billion
copies of the 7 books.
His
Dark Materials Trilogy
by Phillip
Pullman
It is
about Witches and Demons and promotes Godlessness. The Books
are about the defeat of God and promote the power of Satan.
They have now made a movie out of the Golden Compass and the
movie is being censored as well. This book is banned in
schools and libraries for it immoral portrayal of the fall
of God and the reign of Satan.
Howl
by Allen
Ginsberg
It is the
willful destruction of American values in a poet's grief
over suffocating 1950s convention.
The Joy of Sex (1972), More Joy of Sex (1975)
by Alex
Comfort
Lexington
police in 1978 confiscated these sex instruction books in
accordance with a new county ordinance prohibiting the
display of sexually-oriented publications in places
frequented by minors.
The Last Mission (1979)
by Harry
Mazer
Against the
recommendation of school librarians, teachers, and
administrators, the board of the Carroll Middle School
removed this novel from the library for its scattered "bad
words." The novel, which was named 1979's New York Times
Best Book of the Year, is based on the author's experiences
in the Air Force during World War II. Mazer said, "It's like
a slap in the face of veterans. The book speaks about the
sacrifices of the soldiers who fought in that war." Local
residents and parents petitioned and protested as well. In a
final decision, the board voted 6-1 to return the book.
The Last of the Wine
by Mary
Renault
Fifth-century
B.C. Athens is the setting of the historical novel that was
challenged in a high school for references to homosexuality.
Not only did the complainants and their supporters revile
the book, which enlivened an honors history class, but they
also attempted to humiliate the teacher by calling him a
"sexual predator" and accusing him of trying to "recruit"
children to homosexuality. The school board supported the
teacher and the novel.
Literature in Society
In an improbable complaint
about this textbook, two eminent African-American authors
were the main targets of censorship. An excerpt from Ralph
Ellison's Invisible Man was deemed offensive for its use of
the word "nigger," and the sexual slang in Nikki Giovanni's
poetry was found unacceptable. School officials also found
intolerable a reference to homosexuality elsewhere in the
book and seized the ever-so-dangerous texts (that include
Wordsworth and other immoralists) while 12th-grade students
were reading them.
Lolita (1955)
by Vladimir
Nabokov
Although it
was published in Paris, it was soon (1956) to be banned
there for being obscene. An Argentinian court banned the
book in 1959 and again in 1962 ruling that the book
"reflected moral disintegration and reviled humanity." In
1960, the New Zealand Supreme Court also banned the book. It
was later freely published in France, England, and the U.S.
Lord of the Flies
by William
Golding
The Toronto
School Board banned this classic from all its schools,
claiming it was racist for use of the word "niggers." Even
Golding's Nobel Prize in literature did not protect this
author's book.
Lysistrata
by
Aristophanes
U.S. import
ban on Lysistrata was lifted in 1930.This Greek tragedy was
written somewhere around 400 B.C.
Nothing New on the Western Front
by Erich
Maria Remarque
Banned in
Chicago and Boston, in Austria, and Czechoslovakia in 1929;
in Germany in 1930; and in Italy in 1933. There was a public
burning in Germany in 1933.
Pentagon Papers (1971)
Commissioned
by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, this 3,000 page
history of U.S. involvement in Indochina, was banned from
publication by court order. The NY Times was printing
portions of it when the order came down. Later that year,
the U.S. Supreme Court overturned the decision and Bantam
proceeded to publish a paperback edition.
Portnoy's Complaint (1969)
by Philip
Roth
Several
libraries and librarians throughout the U.S. were harassed
and threatened for carrying this book on their shelves.
Search for Truth in History
by David
Irving
This video
tape has already been banned in three countries.
Sex Game
by
Marcus Blake
The book
promotes homosexuality, drug and alcohol use, promiscuity,
and godlessness. It has been banned in the Dallas School
District and other school districts in the surrounding areas
after because a parent caught his 17 year old daughter
reading it and found out that she got it from her high
school in Dallas. Christian organizations such as the
Christian Coalition, American Family Association, Focus on
the Family, Parents for Christ and the Free Market
Foundation have sought to see it banned in bookstores,
libraries, and schools. It is not being sold in stores
because of the controversy.
Satanic Verses
by Salman
Rushdie
The Ayatollah
Khomeini of Iran put a price on the head of this author for
writing this book which allegedly is critical of the Islam
religion. Rushdie, as a result, went into hiding for an
indefinite period of time, fearing for his life.
Slaughterhouse-Five
By Kurt Vonnegut
Banned in Rochester Mich.
because the novel "contains and makes references to
religious matters" and thus fell within the ban of the
establishment clause. Challenged at the Owensboro, Ky. high
School library (1985) because of "foul language, a reference
to 'Magic Fingers' attached to the protagonist's bed to help
him sleep, and the sentence: 'The gun made a ripping
sound like the opening of the fly of God Almighty. ' "
Challenged, but retained on the Round Rock, Tex. Independent
High School reading list (1996) after a challenge that the
book was too violent. This particular novel is the recipient
of a very cool plug in the movie, Footloose, starring
Kevin Bacon
Sylvester and the Magic Pebble
by William
Steig
In 1977, the
Illinois Police Association urged librarians to remove the
book, which portrays its characters as animals, and presents
the police as pigs. The American Library Association
reported similar complaints in 11 other states.
Tomorrow a Rainbow
by J. M.
Ashwell
This book has
been censored because of its racial tones about African and
Africa. It has also been censored because of portrayal of
rape and violence as well as psychological torture. In
addition the book promotes godlessness.
The
Emeralds Flashed
by J. M.
Ashwell
This book has
been censored because of its racial tones about African and
Africa. It has also been censored because depicting nature
of torture and the mentally ill as well as southern United
States Culture. In addition the book promotes godlessness and
immoral behavior.
The Kindred and other Tales
by Elle
Pepper
This book has
been censored because of promotion of witchcraft, sorcery,
and satanic tones. The book promotes godlessness, violence,
and immorality. The illustrations by Logan Hayse
depict graphic images not suitable for younger audiences and
promote things of an evil nature. Since this book is geared
for a young audience it is being censored because of the
immoral and evil perception that it gives off to
impressionable minds.
The Valachi Papers (1968)
by Peter Maas
Asked by the
Justice Dept. to edit the papers of Mafia leader Joseph
Valachi, Maas was later sued by the Justice Dept. for trying
to publish the memoirs. The reason they said was that the
book would hamper law enforcement. The suit was settled and
Putnam published the book in 1968.
Things Your Father Never Taught You
by Robert
Masullo
Production of
this lighthearted look at male grooming was delayed by a
born-again Christian art director who objected to a
description of Japanese furniture arranging as "occultist."
Waco: The Davidian Massacre
by Carol
Moore
This
controversial book challenges the government's version of
events at Waco. A public library refused to carry the book
stating the reason was that the book was privately
published.
Why
Didn't You Have to Go to Vietnam Daddy?
by Steve
Wilken
The books is
being banned because of its unpatriotic nature. It promotes
drug use and promiscuity. It also pro While the Vietnam War
is considered controversial this book is unpatriotic and
promotes drug use and promiscuity. It paints a picture of
America as an immoral country who rages war on its citizens.
Its a slap in the face to any Veteran who has served. This
book also promotes military dissension while saying that its
okay to hate America. This is what Terrorists want us to do.
Its not a history book - its hate literature against
America.
Who Built America?
by Immanuel Velikovsky
Apple Computer has
distributed Who Built America?, an acclaimed history series
created for CD-ROM, as part of a free software package for
schools buying its computers. When it received protests
about material relating to the history of birth control,
abortion, and homosexuality, Apple asked Voyager to delete
the offending material. Voyager refused, and Apple suspended
distribution.
In the 1950s, the scientific
community tried to ban this controversial version of the
origins of our solar system because it didn't comport with
the "official" version of events. It gave false statements
of the findings that our government had found at the time.
The publisher, MacMillan, was forced to give up publication
of the book even though it was on the New York Bestsellers
list at the time.
Women on Top
by Nancy
Friday
Censors got their way in
their demands to remove this book from the Chestatee Public
Library in Gainesville ( Hall County ), Georgia. Before a
final vote was taken by the library board on the fate of
Women on Top, the book was borrowed and "accidentally"
destroyed. The board voted not to replace it.
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