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#read-banned-books — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #read-banned-books, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. Been #reading this and it's pretty good so far! It was part of my #bannedbooks stack I believe. It's about #nativeamerican #environmentaljustice. I'm not sure how it stands as a source but it's been an interesting read.

    #readers #readingcommunity #readmorebooks #ReadBannedBooks

  2. Tonight at LUX Nijmegen: a screening of the documentary “The Librarians” — a powerful film about banned books and the ongoing fight for free access to information. 📚
    📅 9 March
    🕢 19:30 — film + discussion
    📍 LUX Nijmegen
    More info & tickets:
    lux-nijmegen.nl/programma/radb

    #books #boeken #bibliotheken #libraries #BannedBook #BookBan #TheLibrarians #ReadBannedBooks #bookstodon

  3. Vandaag lekker buttons gemaakt. Ben benieuwd of ik er morgen nog andere tegenkom bij de film + debat over banned books.

    📅 9 maart | 🕢 19.30
    📍 LUX Nijmegen
    Meer info:
    lux-nijmegen.nl/programma/radb

    #books #boeken #bibliotheken #libraries #BannedBook #BookBan #TheLibrarians #ReadBannedBooks

  4. Ik lees graag graphic novels en trakteerde mezelf op "Spinning" van Tillie Walden. Oorspronkelijk voor een jonger publiek. Walden kreeg er de Eisner Award voor, en terecht :)

    In de VS staat het op de lijst van banned books - boeken met LGBTQIA+ thema’s, verhalen van POC’s of politieke onderwerpen, juist de verhalen die andere perspectieven laten zien.

    Dus: lees ze.
    Read banned books.

    @bookstodon
    #books #boeken #BannedBoeks #VerbodenBoeken #ReadBannedBooks #LGBTQ #Queerbrarians

  5. RE: journa.host/@Chrisblue/1161438

    ‘No such books for young readers exist, but facts don’t matter to a regime seeking total and complete control.’

    😏

    #ReadBannedBooks #uspol

  6. Currently reading: Animal Farm by George Orwell. Seeing the trailer for the upcoming family-friendly atrocity inspired me to pick up the book to remind myself of the real story. #currentlyreading #AnimalFarm #GeorgeOrwell #ReadBannedBooks #bookstodon

  7. 📚🌈 They can ban the books, but they can’t ban the readers.
    Queer stories save lives, shift futures, & remind people they’re not alone… which is exactly why this little book is smiling through the darkness.

    8bitmagnetsco.com/products/rea

    If you believe every kid deserves to see themselves on a shelf, this sticker belongs with you.
    Grab one & tag a friend who proudly reads the “forbidden” stuff 💫

    #ReadBannedBooks #lgbtqia #queer #stickers

  8. Currently reading: Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. I haven’t picked this up since grade school, but it’s eerie how well Bradbury predicted the future that we are currently living in. #Fahrenheit451 #RayBradbury #books #bookstodon #ReadBannedBooks #currentlyreading

  9. Currently reading: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Other Stories by Lewis Carroll. I didn’t watch and fall in love with the movieAlice in Wonderland until a few years ago, and instantly snapped up this book. I’m finally getting around to reading it and I’m loving it so far. #currentlyreading #AliceinWonderland #AlicesAdventuresinWonderland #LewisCarroll #bookstodon #ReadBannedBooks

  10. I'm making a list of "unlikely #antifascist films" that currently includes (but is not limited to)

    Astroboy
    Bug's Life
    Brave
    Hunchback of Notre Dame
    Iron Giant
    Knives Out
    Mask of Zorro
    Minority Report
    Robin Hood (Disney, 1973)
    Tenet
    Trolls
    West Side Story (2021)
    Wolfwalkers

    What #film would you add?

    #movies #readbannedbooks

  11. @Natasha_Jay
    I love how some of the spines look exactly like my copies.
    📚
    #ReadBannedBooks

  12. @gikkt lol I took this tradition from my mother. But she *did* have one shelf that I was required to review with Mom before I read them.

    She'd always read the sketchy or subversive ones first 💪

    #ReadBannedBooks

  13. "There was, as with many of those living in the gloaming aesthetic twilight of Romanticism, a tendency to confuse the characters with their creator, a narrator with the author. "

    Cool Literary Hub article about Edgar Allan Poe and the Americanism of his work.

    Oh, and your reminder that it's still #BannedBooksWeek, so #ReadBannedBooks

    lithub.com/to-haunt-and-be-hau

  14. “Our reporting on book bans remains a bellwether of a larger campaign to restrict and control education and public narratives, wreaking havoc on our public schools and democracy”
    #Censorship #BannedBooks #BookBans #ReadBannedBooks

    pen.org/report/the-normalizati

  15. Banned books: Why you should read these targeted titles now – USA Today

    Why you should read these banned books now

    USA TODAY Staff, USA TODAY

    As journalists, it’s our job to seek out the truth even when it’s uncomfortable. We value diverse perspectives, are open to new ideas and respect intellectual freedom. So it should come as no surprise that the thought of banning a book would get us riled. 

    What happens when a book is challenged in school boards and public libraries? Titles can be removed from school curriculums or library shelves. Most public schools and libraries have boards made up of elected officials or members appointed by elected officials. It is by the power of these officials that a book can go from challenged to banned in a school district or public library.

    Sure, there is the argument you can just purchase a book if it’s taken off public shelves. But that is true only for those with financial resources. For many, particularly children and young adults, school and public libraries are the only means to access literature.

    With that in mind, current and former USA TODAY staff picked a challenged or banned book that was meaningful to them. In the books’ defense, we’ve written why they deserve a place in our schools, libraries and society.

    ‘Looking for Alaska’ by John Green

    Young people don’t typically seek out stories about grief, but I did after being hit with the sour reality that terrible things can happen to those you love and the world just moves on. Clinging to my signed first-edition, which I reread multiple times and used quotes from in my journal, is something of a core memory to my 12-year-old self. This book is challenged for explicit writing, but it offered the “stick-it-to-the-man”ness I needed to defy expectations and endeavor to be better than the generation that came before. Over a decade after my first read, I can still feel the protest that John Green’s words invoked to seek growth and understanding above all. And that grief never leaves you, it only grows with you. – Sam WoodwardCheck out: USA TODAY’s weekly Best-selling Booklist

    Junie B. Jones series by Barbara Park

    Growing up, Junie B. Jones ​felt more like a spunky pal than a book character. It’s not a moral lesson I remember, but just plain fun. This series has been banned on the basis that Junie is not a good role model. She’s loud and uses words like “dumb” and “stupid.” What are we telling girls if we say the only books they can read have polished, quiet protagonists? What do we stand to lose if we tell girls they can’t be messy? Series author Barbara Park once told USA TODAY a story is valuable even if it “gives the reader nothing more than a smile or two.” I couldn’t agree more. – Clare Mulroy

    ‘A Court of Thorns and Roses’ by Sarah J. Maas

    ACOTAR – as its known by fans – starts when a woman named Feyre is kidnapped and taken to a faerie realm where a blight is plaguing the land. First, she is just figuring out how to survive, but soon she falls in love with Prythian and its subjects. What unfolds is an epic (and spicy) romance, found family, meaty twists and an adventure that brings an immersive world full of magic to life.

    Read ACOTAR the first time to enjoy the ride. Read it the second time to pick up on every hint into the greater Maasverse. Read it the third time because you can’t go a year without saying hello to your favorite characters. – Niki Gunter

    Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

    Continue/Read Original Article Here: Banned books: Why you should read these targeted titles now

    #2025 #America #BannedBooks #BannedBooksWeek #Books #DonaldTrump #Education #Health #History #Libraries #Library #LibraryOfCongress #Opinion #Politics #ReadBannedBooks #Reading #Resistance #Science #Technology #Trump #TrumpAdministration #UnitedStates #USAToday

  16. Books that make us uncomfortable are so important. Blocking access to other views, experiences, and lives stunts us. People need to experience the world, the good, the bad, and the ugly, no matter how uncomfortable that makes you. It's how we learn, grow, and gain empathy. Banning books just shows your fear and your need for power over others.

    #BannedBooksWeek #BannedBooks #ReadBannedBooks #BookRecommendations #BookLightEditorial #BookCommunity

  17. It's Banned Books Week from Oct. 5-11! My little free library is ready.

  18. Currently reading: To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee. Although I’ve seen the movie more recently, I haven’t read the book since high school so I am looking forward to revisiting it from a 2025 perspective. #bookstodon #StoryGraph #ToKillAMockingbird #HarperLee #currentlyreading #ReadBannedBooks

  19. The American Library Association's #BannedBooksWeek begins today. #ReadBannedBooks

    Sign the national pledge against book bans and add your name to the growing movement for the freedom to read.

    action.everylibrary.org/bookba via EveryLibrary

  20. Censorship is so 1984.

    Banned Books Week is Oct. 5-11 this year, culminating in Let Freedom Read Day on Oct. 11.

    #BannedBooksWeek #ReadBannedBooks #books

    bannedbooksweek.org

  21. Currently reading: V For Vendetta by Alan Moore. One of many books I’ve put off reading for a while, and want to read while I still can. #bookstodon #StoryGraph #VforVendetta #AlanMoore #DavidLloyd #currentlyreading #ReadBannedBooks