this post was submitted on 10 Mar 2026
11 points (100.0% liked)

Books

7806 readers
18 users here now

A community for all things related to Books.

Rules

  1. Be Nice. No personal attacks or hate speech.
  2. No spam. All posts should be related to books.
  3. No self promotion.

Official Bingo Posts:

Related Communities

Community icon by IconsBox (from freepik.com)

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
 

At the end of Drabinski’s essay, she provides an account of a trip she took across the country to visit and document American librarians doing the work of keeping books on their shelves. “Everywhere I went,” she writes, “I met people fighting together for a world where all of us can be free.” The “us” here is particular: she’s referring to the marginalized voices most often attacked by book banners. But it’s also universal. If we want to keep American minds free from harmful moral prejudices, narrow and bland aesthetic standards, the invasion of tech oligarchs and profit-driven curricula in our classrooms—from everything, in other words, that book banners of all forms promote—then we must commit, together, to defending books and their readers.

top 1 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] Libb@piefed.social 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Interesting read, thx for sharing. After reading the article, I'm not about that in the book: do they also talk about censoring/banning books from the non-conservative side of the political spectrum? I hope so.

I mean, even as a non-US citizen, it's hard not to see this is also a (worrying) trend, just this time with different motivations and different books/authors being targeted, right?