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Books

Skirting Ban, FPC Committee Votes to ‘Weed’ Tilt, With Same Result: the Book Is Removed

March 30, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 5 Comments

A review committee member with a copy of Ellen Hopkins's "Tilt" this morning at Flagler Palm Coast High School. (© FlaglerLive)

A seven-member committee reviewing a challenge of Ellen Hopkins’s “Tilt” unanimously voted this morning to remove the book from circulation at the Flagler Palm Coast High School library, but not on challenged grounds. The committee found the book did not meet criteria to be banned, but met criteria to be “weeded,” as outdated.

Challenged in Flagler Schools: John Green’s Looking For Alaska, a Review and a Recommendation

March 29, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 18 Comments

John Green published Looking for Alaska in 2005. The cover doesn;t show it well here, but the origin of the smoke is not a cigarette, though there is plenty of smoking in the book, but a candle that has just been extinguished.

John Green’s “Looking for Alaska,” a novel of adolescence, friendship, loyalty and misjudgments, is among the 22 books so far this school year that a trio of individuals have sought to ban from high school library shelves. A committee meets on March 30 at 3 p.m. at Matanzas High School to decide whether to retain it or ban it.

Challenged in Flagler Schools: Ellen Hopkins’s Tilt, a Review and a Recommendation

March 27, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

tilt ellen hopkins

In “Tilt,” Ellen Hopkins gives us the powerful coming of age story of three very engaging, very different American teenagers. The novel is on the list of books three Flagler County residents are seeking to ban. A Flagler Palm Coast High School committee discusses the challenge on Thursday.

Staffing Pressures Reduce Flagler Public Library Hours from 57 to 52 a Week

March 20, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

Stacks at the Flagler County Public Library, where hours are being reduced slightly, and simplified. (© FlaglerLive)

The Flagler County Public Library on Palm Coast Parkway will be open for five fewer hours starting April 3, as weekly total hours will fall from 57 to 52, with a more simplified schedule.

Would-Be Book-Banner Appeals Nowhere Girls Decision Even Before 14-0 Vote to Keep It

March 13, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 22 Comments

The 14-member appeals committee meeting this evening in Bunnell. It was facilitated by Lashakia Moore, the assistant superintendent. (© FlaglerLive)

A 14-member district committee voted unanimously this evening to recommend keeping Amy Reed’s “The Nowhere Girls,” a book deconstructing high school rape culture, on the shelves at Flagler Palm Coast High School and Matanzas High School. The woman challenging the book filed an appeal to the school board even before the superintendent has weighed on.

Citing ‘Reason Above Prejudice,’ Superintendent Upholds Recommendation to Keep Sold on School Shelves

March 13, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

"Sold" was discussed at an appeals committee meeting on March 6. (© FlaglerLive)

Citing “principle above personal opinion and reason above prejudice,” Flagler School Superintendent Cathy Mittlestadt upheld the recommendation of a district appeals committee to keep Patricia McCormick’s “Sold,” on human trafficking, on library shelves at high and middle schools.

Challenged in Flagler Schools: Amy Reed’s The Nowhere Girls, a Review and Recommendation

March 10, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 6 Comments

Amy Reed's "The Nowhere Girls" was published in 2017. It has been frequently banned in various school districts and is facing an attempted ban in the Flagler County school district.

Amy Reed’s “The Nowhere Girls,” a 2017 novel on high school rape culture and three girls’ attempt to counter it, is a #MeToo manifesto for young adults. It’s up for banning from Flagler schools. This review is a guide.

Yet Another Book Survives Ban as 2 Flagler High School Panels Vote to Keep Novel of McCarthy Era

March 7, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

The joint committees of Flagler Palm Coast High School and Matanzas High School meeting this afternoon at Matanzas. (© FlaglerLive)

A joint high school committee’s decision today to retain Malida Lo’s “Last Night at the Telegraph Club” was the sixth book in a row in about as many weeks that survived a challenge either on MHS or joint MHS-FPC school-level committees, or at the district-level appeals committee.

District Appeals Committee Votes Unanimously to Keep Sold on High School and Middle School Shelves

March 6, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

The 11-member appeals committee meeting this evening. (© FlaglerLive)

An 11-member district-wide appeals committee this evening voted to uphold two school-based committees’ decisions to keep “Sold,” the fictional story of a 13-year-old girl trafficked into sexual slavery, on the library shelves at high and middle schools.

Challenged in Flagler Schools: McCormick’s Sold, a Review and a Recommendation

March 6, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Patricia McCormick's "Sold" challenged for banning in Florida

Patricia McCormick’s “Sold,” about the experiences of a 13-year-old girl sold into sexual slavery, is among the 22 books that a trio of “moms for liberty” have sought to ban from high school library shelves. A school committee voted to keep the book. The banners appealed the decision to a district committee, which meets on March 6. The following review is presented as a guide.

Against Policy, Flagler’s Book-Challenge Appeal Panels Dim Faculty and District Vote to Minority Status

February 28, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Assistant Superintendent Lashakia Moore at a Feb. 6 community meeting where most of the non-district employees looking to be appointed to book-review committees heard an orientation. The committee members were culled from that group. The first such appeals committee meets on March 6. (© FlaglerLive)

A Flagler County school district-level committee will meet for the first time on Monday to take up the appeal of a decision not to ban the novel “Sold” from school library shelves. The make-up of the committee is not in line with school board policy, giving parents and community members a lopsided presence at the expense of district staff and faculty.

Challenged in Flagler Schools: Malinda Lo’s Last Night at the Telegraph Club, a Review and a Recommendation

February 27, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 16 Comments

Malinda Lo’s “Last Night at the Telegraph Club” is among the 22 books that a trio of “moms for liberty” have sought to ban from high school library shelves. A joint committee of Flagler Palm Coast and Matanzas high school faculty members and parent representatives meets on March 7 to decide whether to retain it or ban the book. The following review is presented as a guide.

Stony Silence as Commission Proclaims Flagler Reads Together and Book-Banning Title

February 20, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

In Celeste Ng's Our Missing Hearts, all bookshelves have been empties and the books pulped.

A rather joyless Flagler County Commission designated March as “Flagler Reads Together” month as the Friends of the Library chose Celeste Ng’s “Our Missing Hearts,” a novel of a dystopian America that bans books and represses minorities, as its chosen title.

Why Is DeSantis Protecting Our Kids from ‘Literature’?

February 18, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

A book-burning in 1930s Germany. (National Archives and Records Administration, College Park)

Books are filthy. Yet liberals want your children to read them. Why? So your children will become drag queens, tree huggers, NPR listeners, Lizzo fans, soccer watchers, trans activists, vaccine takers, election denier deniers, AP class takers, and America haters.

The Black Flamingo Thwarts Book Ban as Matanzas and FPC Vote 10-0 to Keep It on Shelves

February 17, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 24 Comments

Hardback copies of Dean Atta's The Black Flamingo were all over the semi-rectangular table along which sat the 10 members of the joint review committee Thursday afternoon in Room 3A at the Government Services Building. The line on the shirt of one of the committee members reads: "Reading makes your mind grow." The shirt has not, so far, been the target of a challenge. (© FlaglerLive)

A joint review committee from Matanzas and Flagler Palm Coast high schools voted unanimously Thursday to keep Dean Atta’s “The Black Flaming” on the two schools’ library shelves. It is the second time in a little over two weeks that the committees rejected a challenge by one of the three individuals targeting 22 books for bans so far this year.

Book Challenge in Flagler Schools: Dean Atta’s ‘The Black Flamingo,’ a Review and a Recommendation

February 16, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

The book's cover as it appeared in the United States, left, and in Britain, where it originally published in 2019.

Dean Atta’s “The Black Flamingo” is among the 22 books a trio of individuals have sought to ban from high school library shelves. A joint committee of Flagler Palm Coast and Matanzas high school meets today to decide whether to retain it or ban it. The following review is presented as a guide.

The Bible’s Song of Songs Is Full of Sex, Challenging Assumptions

February 10, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Figuring out what to do with the ‘Song of Songs’ has preoccupied people reading the Bible for centuries. 'Song of Songs' illustrated by Florence Kingsford/Southern Methodist University. (Wikimedia Commons)

Graphic descriptions of both male and female bodies pervade the work and are certainly titillating, even bordering on pornographic. Sensual metaphors such as “grazing among the lilies” and “drinking … from the juice of my pomegranates” suggest sexual practices that are anything but vanilla.

‘The Truth About Alice’ Survives Book-Banning Attempt in 12-0 Vote by FPC and Matanzas Committees

February 2, 2023 | FlaglerLive | 25 Comments

The Matanzas High School and Flagler Palm Coast High School book-review committees met jointly Tuesday at Matanzas to review The Truth About Alice. The committees voted to keep the book on library shelves. (© FlaglerLive)

A book review committee jointly made up of Flagler Palm Coast High and Matanzas High School representatives on Tuesday voted unanimously to keep “The Truth About Alice” in circulation at both schools’ libraries. The book was challenged on claims that it contained “pornography.” It is the fourth book to survive a challenge, out of 22 challenges, with 10 already removed and others awaiting review.

Fred the Great Leapfrogs 10-Year-Old Palm Coast Girl Into Young Children’s Book Author

December 23, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

Bella Soumokil with her first published book.

Fifth Palm Coast fifth-grader Bella Soumokil several years ago started writing and drawing what became “Fred the Great,” a 56-page book for children about humility and family, published locally and selling on Amazon.

State Panel Developing Guidelines on Book Bans for School Librarians May Be at an Impasse

December 8, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 12 Comments

A book discussion announcement at the University of Central Florida's library this fall. That sort of announcement would be banned in high school libraries. "All Bopys Aren't Blue" is banned in Flagler school libraries. (© FlaglerLive)

A new law that intensifies scrutiny of school library books requires school boards to adopt procedures that provide for the “regular removal or discontinuance” of books from media centers based on factors such as alignment with state academic standards. The panel designated to develop the training playbook for librarians is mired in disagreement, with a Jan. 1 deadline looming.

In Flagler Schools, New Regime of Book Challenges Is Laborious, Subjective and Fraught With Uncertainties

December 1, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 10 Comments

Scott Rooke lectern (© FlaglerLive)

Gray areas of uncertainty, anxiety, subjectivity and a gaping lack of state direction are shading the new regime of serial book challenges and book bans in the Flagler school district as the state Department of Education has yet to issue directions on library holdings.

Flagler Schools Have Been Quietly Banning or ‘Removing’ Many Books Since Summer in Bow to ‘Moms for Liberty’

November 2, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 41 Comments

Last year's ban from Flagler schools' library shelves of a single book drew protests and national attention. But many more bpooks have been banned since in the district, without a word, or even the school board necessarily being aware of them. (© FlaglerLive)

The school district has been quietly and steadily banning books from library shelves at Flagler Palm Coast and Matanzas High, and at Indian Trails and Buddy Taylor middle schools since summer, FlaglerLive has found, with every title part of a list of challenges from just three members of the group known as “Moms for Liberty.” There is no indication that the challengers are reading the books, but they have been asked to join the district’s review committee.

Meet Shehan Karunatilaka, Sri Lankan Novelist and Winner of the Booker Prize

October 19, 2022 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

Sri Lankan novelist Shehan Karunatilaka.

Sri Lankan novelist Shehan Karunatilaka has won the 2022 Booker Prize for his second novel, The Seven Moons of Maali Almeida. The Booker prize is the among most important international literary prize for writers of English after the Nobel. It is awarded each year for the best novel written in English and published in the United Kingdom or Ireland.

Anthony Bourdain and the Farce of the ‘Unauthorized’ Biography

October 13, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

The circumstances of Bourdain’s death were bound to arouse curiosity.

The farce is the positioning of this battle as one conducted between “unauthorized biography” on the one hand and “authorized” biography on the other – the publisher, for hinting at scandalous content by casting the work as “unauthorized,” and the aggrieved, to think they have any power to “authorize” whether the biography gets published in the first place.

Annie Ernaux’s Literature Nobel and the Art of Writing from Experience

October 9, 2022 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

Annie Ernaux at the 30th book fair at Brive-la-Gaillarde in November 2011. (Wikimedia Commons)

The French writer Annie Ernaux has won the 2022 Nobel prize in literature at the age of 82. The academy praised her “for the courage and clinical acuity with which she uncovers the roots, estrangements and collective restraints of personal memory.”

At Flagler Public Library, Freedom Readers’ Club and Other Page-Turners Boldly Defy Book Bans

September 22, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 14 Comments

The Flagler County Public Library takes its safe spaces seriously--for teens, for books that are frequently challenged or banned elsewhere, and for for open discussions. (© FlaglerLive)

Freedom Readers, a book club for teens focused on banned and challenged books, emerged at the Flagler County Public Library in response to the book-banning controversies at the Flagler school board last fall. The club is one of several initiatives countering “what feels like a lot of repression,” in the words of Youth Services Librarian Gemma Rose.

Palm Coast’s Dr. Robert A. Ernst Gets Silver Medal for Second Children’s Book

September 5, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Dr. Bob Ernst

The Annual 2022 Florida Authors and Publishers Association President’s Book Awards has recognized Harry Saves Wreck by Dr. Robert A. Ernst, a Palm Coast resident, in the category of Children Grades 3-5, as a Silver Medal winner at their annual awards banquet this month.

Octavia E. Butler, Sci-Fi Pioneer, and Her New Vision for Humanity

June 27, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 3 Comments

Octavia E. Butler poses in a Seattle bookstore in 2004. The celebrated science fiction author died in 2006. AP Photo/Joshua Trujillo

Octavia Butler was the first science fiction writer to be awarded a MacArthur Genius Grant. A pioneering writer in a genre long dominated by white men, her work explored power structures, shifting definitions of humanity and alternative societies.

Summer High: 5 Books on the Joys and Challenges of LGBTQ Teen and Young Adult Life

June 24, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

The past decade has seen a flurry of young adult fiction written from a queer perspective.

In recognition of LGBT Pride Month, Jonathan Alexander – an English professor with a scholarly interest in the interplay between sexuality and literature, and the children’s and young adult fiction section editor for the Los Angeles Review of Books, presents his “must-reads” for this summer.

Retired News-Journal Editor Cal Massey’s Novel Published by Experimental Fiction Press

April 27, 2022 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

Cal Massey.

An award-winning political dark comedy by Cal Massey, a Daytona Beach News-Journal editor retired in Flagler Beach, has been published by the Journal of Experimental Fiction in Chicago. Massey retired as deputy managing editor of the Daytona Beach News-Journal in 2016.

More than 1,500 Books Have Been Banned in Public Schools. House Panel Asks Why.

April 8, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

Flagler County was among the book-banning districts. (© FlaglerLive)

From July 2021 to the end of March this year more than 1,500 books were banned in 86 school districts in 26 states. A report on book-banning in public schools found that of the banned books, 467 — or 41 percent — contained main or secondary characters of color; 247, or 22 percent, addressed racism; and 379, or 33 percent, of the books contained LGBTQ+ themes.

From Head Football Coach at Flagler Palm Coast High School to Prolific Novelist: Caesar Campana’s Afterwords

March 25, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

Caesar and Monica Campana, both of whom are retired educators from the Flagler County school district, Monica as a long-time librarian at Indian Trails Middle School, Caesar as a football coach and English teacher at Flagler Palm Coast High School. (© FlaglerLive)

Caesar Campana was Flagler Palm Coast High School’s head football coach and an English teacher. Since his retirement, he’s published four novels, all exploring rather dark themes, a book of stories and poems and a memoir, with his wife, Monica Campana, who retired as a librarian at Indian Trails Middle School, as his editor. We caught up with the Campanas in the Hammock.

Race, Gender, Wealth, Books: It’s All in “The Personal Librarian,” Flagler Reads Together’s 2022 Pick

February 28, 2022 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

the personal librarian flagler reads together

Flagler Reads Together’s choice this year is a historical novel about Belle da Costa Greene, the Black woman who passed herself as white as the J.P. Morgan librarian for 43 years.

FPC’s Jack Petocz Is Featured at Length in Page One New York Times Story on Schools’ Book Bans

January 31, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 9 Comments

Jack Petocz, center, holding a copy of All Boys Aren't Blue, at the protest he organized against book bans by the school district last November. Next to him is Flagler Palm Coast High School student Alysa Vidal, holding the sign Petocz made and was featured holding in one of the New York Times' pictures, and School Board member candidate Courtney VandeBunte. (© FlaglerLive)

Jack Petocz, the Flagler Palm Coast High School senior who organized last November’s protest against two local school board members’ attempt to ban books from school libraries, is featured today in a Page One New York Times article that examines a surge of attempted and actual book bans in school districts across the country, including in Flagler.

Dismissing ‘Slippery Slope of Censorship,’ GOP Senators Back Stricter Scrutiny of School and Library Books

January 26, 2022 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

School libraries' catalogues are under scrutiny across the nation. (American Library Association)

The proposal (SB 1300) would change the review process for books and other learning materials, adding requirements and making it more open to the public but also enabling regular purges of book lists to align them with standards or if the books are considered out of date.

Americanisms: Sinclair Lewis’s Main Street and Babbitt

January 2, 2022 | Pierre Tristam | 1 Comment

Sinclair Lewis's "Main Street" and "Babbitt" appeared in 1920 and 1922 to immense acclaim. The Library of America reissued the two novels in one volume in 1993, and re-issued three more a few years later.

Today we read the Sinclair Lewis of “Main Street,” “Babbitt,” “Elmer Gantry” and “It Can’t Happen Here” not for literary value but the way Margaret Mead studied the Balinese character–for ethnographic insights. Lewis’s novels are a window into an America not nearly as dated as his reputation. 

Eulogy for Nature: Edward Abbey’s Desert Solitaire

January 1, 2022 | Pierre Tristam | 4 Comments

Edward Abbey, who died in 1989, published Desert Solitaire in 1968.

Edward Abbey’s “Desert Solitaire,” published in January 1968, worthy of any top-100 list of the best books of the last hundred years and an essential read–and re-read-today, is a meditation, a polemic, a manifesto, a provocation, a valentine and an elegy to the red desert and to American wilderness.

God’s Plagues: Philip Roth’s Nemesis

December 31, 2021 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

nemesis philip roth god plagues tristam

Philip Roth’s “Nemesis” is the story of an unsuspecting Everyman who becomes a polio superspreader and turns on his fiancee, God and life. Written in 2010, the novel can be read in the age of the coronavirus as a study in grief and loss and the limits of personal, or divine, responsibility.

Trump Troll Chronicles: Bob Woodward’s Peril

December 30, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 2 Comments

"Peril" is the third of Bob Woodward's books on the Trump Administration, written with Robert Costa. It was published in September.

Bob Woodward’s and Robert Costa’s “Peril,” third in the trilogy of Woodward’s books on the Trump administration, isn’t history. It’s most revealing in what it does not say. It’s tragicomedy. It’s a chronicle of trash foretold. And it’s prediction. The worst is ahead. 

Call DCF: Marieke Lucas Rijneveld’s The Discomfort of Evening

December 29, 2021 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

Marieke Lucas Rijneveld's "The Discomfort of Evening" was published in the Netherlands

Marieke Lucas Rijneveld, who now goes by the pronouns they/them, won the International Booker Prize for “The Discomfort of Evening,” an autobiographical novel about a 10-year-old girl who thinks she willed the death of her brother, and who watches her family and her bearings collapse after his death. The book caused a controversy due to themes of adolescent sexuality and animal torture.

The Loneliness of a Dictator: Garcia-Marquez’s Autumn of the Patriarch

December 25, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 7 Comments

autumn patriarch garcia marquez

Autumn of the Patriarch is a study in power unbound, unscrupulous, re-imagined rather than invented. History gave Garcia-Marquez too much material to need invention. Approaching 50 years since the novel published, it has recently come to feel more contemporary again.

Patriotism Recovered: Richard Rorty’s Achieving Our Country

December 24, 2021 | Pierre Tristam | 4 Comments

richard rorty achieving our country

“Achieving Our Country” is an energizing manifesto, a reminder that we are not as good as we think we are, and, atrocious as we can be,  not nearly as bad, either. We are merely unachieved. With a little less despair, a little more affection, even–heaven forbid–a bit of patriotism, however defined but equally respected we can achieve more.

Banning LGBTQ-Themed Books From Flagler Schools Is an Attempt to Erase Students Like Me. We Will Not Stand For It.

December 7, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 47 Comments

Jack Petocz at the Nov. 16 demonstration he organized, holding a copy of "All Boys Aren't Blue." (© FlaglerLive)

Linking the vile and threatening language his student-led demonstration drew outside a school board meeting in November to the superintendent’s decision to ban an LGBTQ-themed book for now, Jack Petocz, a student at Flagler Palm Coast High School, calls on the superintendent to reconsider the decision and consider its consequences.

Superintendent’s Decision: ‘All Boys Aren’t Blue’ Banned for Now, Other Books Return to Library Shelves

December 7, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 23 Comments

Superintendent Cathy Mittelstadt sent the Flagler School Board a summary of a book committee's findings and her recommendations regarding four titles Board member Jill Woolbright had challenged. (© FlaglerLive)

Following the challenges of four titles by Flagler School Board member Jill Woolbright and a review by a book-challenge committee, the superintendent decided to return three of the four titles to their shelves but withhold a fourth pending new protocols that could still provide access.

Judy Blume Among 20 Writers Exploring Depictions of Desire at Annual Key West Literary Seminar

December 3, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 1 Comment

judy blume

More than 20 leading American and international writers are to explore literary depictions of desire, from the profound to the profane, during the 39th annual Key West Literary Seminar. The acclaimed gathering for literature fans is set for Thursday through Sunday, Jan. 6-9.

Committee Reviewing Books 2 Board Members Want Banned Completes Its Work as District Sounds Out Librarians

December 2, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 11 Comments

The Flagler Palm Coast High School Media Center is usually a refuge from adult absurdities. (© FlaglerLive)

The findings of a committee judging the appropriateness of four books for school libraries are expected imminently, as new book challenges have been filed and the Flagler district’s eight librarians were interviewed by district staff about their practices.

American Library Association Condemns Broad Censorship of Books on Race and LGBTQ in Schools and Libraries

December 1, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 4 Comments

As in the rest of the country, the books targeted for bans by Flagler County School Board member Jill Woolbright are by or about marginalized people. (© FlaglerLive)

Some individuals and officials say the voices of the marginalized have no place on library shelves. Including in Flagler, they have launched campaigns demanding the censorship of books and resources that mirror the lives of those who are gay, queer, or transgender, or that tell the stories of persons who are Black, Indigenous or persons of color.

Flagler School Libraries Face Chilling Dangers Beyond Book Bans

November 27, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 16 Comments

If disingenuous were an undiscovered continent, Flagler County School Board member Jill Woolbright, above, would be its Columbus. (© FlaglerLive)

Book-banning doesn’t really exist: ban a book, and it gains more notoriety than ever. The danger ahead in Flagler schools is Board members Jill Woolbright’s and Janet McDonald’s attempt to keep certain books from even reaching library shelves before they’re bought, thus eliminating the glare of controversy. That kind of self-censorship is far more damaging to diversity on Flagler’s library shelves.

Why All Boys Aren’t Blue Belongs in High School Libraries: A Response to Brian McMillan

November 18, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 38 Comments

books stacks

Palm Coast Observer Editor Brian McMillan would restrict the book at the center of a controversy from high school libraries, even though he doesn’t find it pornographic. His argument and his prescription are untenable, because they rest on an analogy that has no application to George Johnson’s “All Boys Aren’t Blue.” A school district committee is currently reviewing the book’s status.

The Live Interview: Author George M. Johnson Speaks to Those Who Want Book Banned From Flagler Schools

November 13, 2021 | FlaglerLive | 42 Comments

george m. johnson interview

George M. Johnson, author of “All Boys Aren’t Blue, one of the books School Board member Jill Woolbright calls a “crime” to have in schools and wants banned, speaks to FlaglerLive about frequent experiences with “the purity brigade,” differences between porn and sex, the orchestration behind current book bans and what Johnson would tell the district committee reviewing the book.

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