Here I go again, blogging about book banning. It’s too important to sweep under the rug.
Today’s blog post is longer than most of mine, but this is a topic that is near and dear to my heart. It is a topic that is indicative of the trouble our world is in today.
A small but vocal segment of our society believes it is wrong to teach young people about slavery, the Holocaust, or any part of history that makes them uneasy. They start by asking that books be removed from public school libraries and classrooms. They complain if certain books and plays written by Shakespeare are read in the classroom or assigned as required reading. Then they move on to public libraries. Then they start attacking authors and book publishers.
They believe that their freedom of speech trumps my freedom to read. They believe they have the right to deny you and me the right to read anything we want. Some of them don’t mind using violence to get their point across.
As I stated in an earlier blog post, they have the right to regulate what their own children read, but they don’t have the right to deny my great-nieces the right to read what they want and need to read.
Where does it end? Just look at 1930s Germany, if you want to know. Just look at countries where groups like the Taliban have gained political control.
It’s time for reasonable people to pay attention
I hear too many people say, “I never use the public library. I buy the books I want to read.” As a writer, I want people to purchase my books. I also want public libraries to purchase my books. But that’s not the point.
The point is that public libraries are integral to the very foundation of our country and our society. I read an article last week that quoted the American Library Association (ALA) as reporting that book challenging at public libraries in 2022 amounted to 16% of all book challenges in the United States, but in 2023 public libraries are receiving approximately 50% of the book challenges in the US.
Let that sink in. Also, let it sink in that the Proud Boys have disrupted reading hours at public libraries and librarians have received death threats. Is that what you want at your local public library?
Well-meaning, misguided people are taking away your right to read. Many of them are even doing it in the name of God. It makes them feel good to say that. It makes them feel good to say they’re doing it “to protect the children.”
I understand the need for age-appropriate books; however, today’s right-wing activists are hiding behind that political campaign sound bite and are using it to nitpick and challenge every book that comes down the pike. Their “holier than thou” attitude is wearing thin with me.
They’re on a mission to dumb us down, to dictate what we can and cannot have access to, to limit our intellectual potential. They are on a mission to erase the ugly and uncomfortable parts of our nation’s history.
Many historical novels have been challenged and banned in various places over the years, and it seems like all fiction is fair game for the book banners today. In my blog post today I highlight three historical novels that have been challenged and banned in various locations.
These three immediately came to mind
I have read each of those novels and not one of them warped my mind. Were you damaged by reading any of these novels? I doubt it. Were you moved to understand and see the world differently by reading these novels? Probably.
To Kill a Mockingbird teaches us about racial discrimination and injustice while also teaching us that Atticus Finch had integrity and maybe we should, too.
Beloved teaches us about the horrors of slavery and that the horrors did not end with the Civil War. It teaches us the lengths desperate people will go to prevent their children from being enslaved and living in horrible circumstances. That’s being demonstrated daily at the US-Mexican border.
The Grapes of Wrath teaches us what can happen after a decade of affluence and decadence and a time of drought as it illustrates a side of life during The Great Depression.
It’s one thing to read that thousands of people lost their farms and everything they had during the “Dust Bowl,” but it’s altogether different to read The Grapes of Wrath and live with the novel’s characters.
The Snow Forest, by Elizabeth Gilbert
In July of this year, an historical novel scheduled to be released in February 2024 was attacked on the author’s Goodreads account to the point that she chose to cancel its publication.
Elizabeth Gilbert, who wrote Eat, Pray, Love had written a novel set in Russia in the 1930s. With all the current interest in the war in Ukraine today, it would seem an opportune time to release a book set in 1930s Russia.
But author Elizabeth Gilbert learned that was not the case. She got so much blowback from her fans, that she pulled The Snow Forest even after some of her readers had pre-ordered the book. Her fans in Ukraine (or at least enough of them) said it was not the right time to release a book set in Russia. In response, the author suspended the publication of the book.
Author Alina Adams’s Thought on this
I read a blog post by author Alina Adams who was born in Odessa, Ukraine. Ms. Adams’ post maintains that historical fiction can make an important statement about the world and not just be a source of entertainment.
Ms. Adams wrote, “And as someone who loves to read historical fiction taking place all over the world in all sorts of different time periods, I am wary of a mindset which might lead to authors and publishers censoring themselves, shying away from setting stories in regions where there is ongoing political strife.”
In addition to specific examples of historical novels that have been challenged and banned, Ms. Adams’ blog post contained several succinct statements about the potential historical fiction holds, including the following: “Sometimes, historical fiction can tell a truth non-fiction isn’t equipped to deliver.” Also, “It doesn’t just make you think, it makes you feel. And it makes you empathize.”
My thoughts on this
Reading an historical novel might not change your political stance or religious beliefs but, if you give it a chance, it just might help you see the other side of an issue.
It might at least help you realize that people with views that oppose yours are not necessarily your enemies. They just might be human beings with a different perspective and life experience.
Please take a couple of minutes to read Alina Adams’ complete blog post from July 27, 2023 on M.K. Tod’s blog, A Writer of History: Why Historical Fiction Must Keep Tackling Controversial Topics | A Writer of History.
A quote from author Barbara Kyle
I printed this quote from Barbara Kyle and have it taped to my computer:
“The move to self-censorship for fear of ‘cultural appropriation’ is a sad state of affairs. Author Morgan Jones eloquently champions the opposite position: ‘Fiction remains the best means we have of finding connection where there seems to be none; and the novel, of all forms, encourages a search that’s deep and sustained. By reading (or writing) one, you’ve travelled somewhere else. You’ve moved, if only slightly, toward others. In a world that finds and increasingly exploits division and difference, this is an invaluable, precious exercise.”
Since my last blog post
Marie and I finished proofreading and creating the cover for our upcoming cookbook, The Aunts in the Kitchen: Southern Family Recipes. We submitted it to Amazon on Friday and requested a proof copy. It should arrive this week and, if we are pleased with it, we’ll give Amazon the go ahead to publish it. Look for an update and perhaps a cover reveal in next Monday’s blog post.
Until my next blog post
Be aware of what is going on in your community and state related to book challenges and book bannings. Speak up for books. Speak up for the freedom to read. Speak up for public libraries and librarians.
Have you ordered my American Revolution e-ghost story? “Ghost of the Battle of Guilford Courthouse: An American Revolutionary War Ghost Story” is available from Amazon, along with my other books: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CH7JCP11/. It’s only available as an e-Booklet.

If you don’t have a good book to read, visit your local public library. Or, from the comfort of your home, go to its website and search for books you would like to read or subjects you want to learn more about. You will be amazed at what is available at your fingertips!
Take time for friends and family.
Thank you for taking time to read this long blog post.
Remember the people of Ukraine, Maui, Libya,….
Janet





And a very good and necessary post it is that you have written Janet. It is amazing that the XXI C. has become the gateway to the return of censorship, puritanism and absolute control. Elitism in political parties, especially those to the left and to the extreme right, has taken control of governments and countries and they have imposed upon us their ideas and now feel they need to protect us from what they fear. We have now gone back to the middle ages. What is next? The Holy Inquisition? I think it would be logical to think so and lamentable that we have come to this. Here in Europe it is absolutely ridiculous. They even put disclosures and warnings on videos that are on newspapers websites because we might feel offended or hurt, or scared or I don’t know what. Just like the extremes in weather patterns and forest fires, this extreme in control is artificial, unnecessary and unappreciated. Lamentably the youth are growing up accustomed to these controls and these prohibitions and they will get to the point where they will believe that this is the way it should be. So all parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, friends, teachers etcetera, should strive to teach children that censorship is wrong and that these books, among many more, are jewels of human literature and they should be read. That the past holds many evils but they are real and they must be known so that, hopefully, we may avoid them. But we should avoid them because of our intelligence and the mercy we receive from God, not because some puritanical bureaucrat does not want us to know about them. May God bless Janet and have a wonderful week.
Francisco.-
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Um, don’t these people understand that banning a book doesn’t magically erase the people, events, ideas, and/or emotions that inspired the book as if they’d never existed? All they get is ignorance, anger, and political strife. I keep waiting for a deus ex machina to come in and save us all. Sigh . . .
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They are certainly misguided, but you are too generous in calling book banners “well-meaning!” I taught Toni Morrison’s book to eleventh graders for twenty years and dare I say none of them are the worse for wear because of it. I am horrified by this effort, which is unfortunately, not creating much of a reaction in the general public, what with the competition for people’s eyes and ears in our media saturated time.
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It’s hard to believe they banned books in free countries- 🌺
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Yes, it is, Laleh. It seems like free people who have been spoiled by living in an open society their entire lives are beginning to become afraid of knowledge. They are apparently ignorant of the road they are trying to take us down. It baffles me.
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You state is well, Trish. I don’t know how we get across to the general public what is taking place. Most people aren’t taking this right-wing book banning movement seriously… or they aren’t even aware of it. I have a small platform, but I feel led to speak out about it more and more often on my blog. Thank you for finding and reading my blog and for taking the time to leave a comment. My hat’s off to you for teaching 11th grade English for 20 years! We need more teachers like you.
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That’s what we need, Liz: a deus ex machina to save us from ourselves. This whole thing baffles me. Some of the latest statistics from the ALA are alarming, yet the masses go on their merry way in their tiny worlds and pay no attention. I used to wonder how the Germans got suckered in by Hitler. I wonder no more.
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Thank you so much, Francis, for your thoughts on this. You express my thoughts better than I did. I, too, worry about the young people who think this is normal… the American children and youth who think Trumpian politics is the norm… who may think it’s no big deal if books are removed from libraries. I don’t know where it will end. Your point about the disclosures and warnings is true here as well. On the TV news broadcasts, the authors now warn us that what we are about to see “could be offensive.” Yes, the war in Ukraine is offensive… and I think we should all be watching those reports so we can be well-informed citizens. The Vietnam War was on the TV news every night of my teen and pre-teen years. I’m glad my parents and the new anchors did not shield me from what was taking place. We live in a world where every child makes the ball team and every child gets a prize or a medal just for participating. What kind of adults will they grow up to be? The real world does not reward you just for showing up. But I digress, as I tend to do. I shudder to think what the future of the free world is going to look like in the near future. Look at the people who are running for President of the US in 2024. Is this really the best we can do? Perhaps I should just leave it there before I really start ranting? Have a great week!
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You’re absolutely right and rightful anger does affect me too. But God is in charge, no matter what “they” think or plan. Thank you Janet and a great week to you too!
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The orange menace’s tactics are right out of Mein Kampf.
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🥺🥺🥺
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Absolutely.
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God was in charge in the 1930s, too, but look what the world had to suffer through for nearly 20 years due to the likes of Hitler and Stalin. In God’s permissive will, He gave human beings freewill even though some of them are evil. Trump is evil personified.
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Great post! I read banned books…I am a banned book. 😜🥰❤️
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Yay! We have to shine a light on this growing menace to our country.
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We see through a glass darkly… yes, Trump is evil personified and he will fail. Our spirit is not of fear but of faith Janet. No matter what we see or hear, we trust that goodness will triumph over evil and over evil ones. Take good care Janet. I am sure you are arduously working on your book and on the cookbook. Be productive and creative I am sure the results will be positive. All the best.
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Thank you for your reassuring words, Francis. Yes, good will defeat evil in the end. I just don’t look forward to the brewing battle. You are a man of great faith. Thank you for reminding me that all is not lost, even when politicians take us down an evil path. I appreciate that.
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You’re very welcome Janet. Have a blessed evening. All the best!
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It’s such an unfortunate situation due to ignorance.
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I agree, David. It seems I’m reading about another case of book challenging or banning almost daily.
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I hear you, Janet and I agree. I will now read MK Todd’s blog. Thank you
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You’re welcome! Thanks for your comment.
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