I’m a Teen Services Librarian at the West Seattle Branch of The Seattle Public Library.
I’ve been working in teen services for 15 years and am proud to say I’m the last of the original hires when The Seattle Public Library began Young Adult Services in 1998. There were seven of us hired to begin this service division, and the rest have moved into other areas of library service. I was the teen booklist coordinator for a decade or so, and I’ve been an editor and writer for our teen blog, Push To Talk, since we began in 2007.
Tell us about Banned Books Week:
Banned
Books Week is probably my favorite library-oriented celebration. I try to read something that’s been banned or
challenged every year around the big week.
I like picking up things that were challenged years ago, even if I
usually cannot see what the fuss is about; the perspective time gives us
illuminates the transitory nature of values, beliefs, and mores, things we
usually think of as eternal. Last year,
I read Kate Chopin’s proto-feminist classic, The Awakening. What seemed to be the issue was her
independent mind, her willingness to leave her family behind to pursue her own
desires. She’s a selfish woman in many
respects, but her rebellion against her society’s strictures still holds a
charge. This year, I’m rereading Allen
Ginsberg’s long poem, Howl. I recently
watched the film adaption with James Franco as Ginsberg, and really liked how
it opened up the poem with a dramatic version of the obscenity trial and
animations in conjunction with long sections of the poem.
Can you showcase some displays for
us?
My
branch, an old Carnegie library, does not serve displays well, and I’ve often
let it slide, at least in my teen area.
This year, though, my teen volunteer Lexie and I put together a sort of
Top Ten Banned Teen Books. We display
each of the books face forward along with a short annotation, a list of the
reasons why it’s been banned or challenged, and a six-word summary for readers
who just can’t wait any longer to get their hands on the book. I’m also including the other displays we did
this year for adult and children’s materials.What do you do to spread the word about Banned Books Week and Intellectual Freedom Issues?
For many years, I worked with our local theatre group, Book-It Theatre, to bring one of their Danger! Books programs to the middle school I work with. They would perform a section out of three challenged books (line by line, including the little parts like “he said, she said”), full of drama and gestures and even funny voices, if the piece required it. The students were always hooked on these performances, and then we’d have a short discussion afterwards beginning with a reading of the First Amendment and then moving into the reasons these books were challenged and how it was always a complex issue, because of people’s different values.
Seattle
Public Library has a podcast of one of these performances, from 2009, here: PODCAST
I also write for our teen blog, Push To Talk. Last year, I created a series of posts that featured a different teen title each day of Banned Books Week. Push To Talk Banned Books
Readers Roar: Let’s hear what kids
and teens have to say about banned books
[This
part is from Lexie, my teen volunteer, 15 years old.]
Libraries
are an essential part of our culture because they grant everyone access to
books and media that are expensive or unavailable otherwise. Libraries form a
community and encourage others to read. They are a vital support for those who
wish to learn and a resource for all ages. Books can be anything you’re looking
for, or something completely unexpected. They can be friends, teachers, a
hiding place, or a way to express who you are. Books open a gate to other
cultures, build a path to other worlds, take you back to your roots, and then
lead you home, a slightly different person. I believe that books are a
necessary way to explore the limits of imagination.
When
a book is banned, it doesn’t protect people from bad ideas, it locks the door
to a separate story. People shouldn’t be able to define “good” and “evil” for
everyone else*. It’s your own job to establish your morals and values, and
everyone has to do this themselves. Forcing your own on someone else is like
taking away their opportunity to be their own person. People should be free to
warn others and discourage them from reading certain books, because that’s free
speech, and some may heed that. But they should be free to form their own
opinions, whether they agree or not.
*This
leads on to ethics, agreed-on morals, and global consensus. I will leave my
rant about this untyped and simply thought.
This series has done more to promote a love of reading among a certain age group than any other book or series I can think of. Little kids – boys and girls – just love a book that uses words like “fart” and “poopypants.” Their parents will often roll their eyes just a bit, but if I ever meet a really young, reluctant reader with a frustrated parent, I direct the family to Captain Underpants, who consistently saves the day.
What can Library Lions blog readers
do for Banned Books Week?
Pick up a title that’s been challenged, especially in your community, and read it. Read it with no expectations of liking it or disliking it, wanting to protect it or wanting to ban it. It’s OK. Just enjoy it for what the author intended. I like the older titles for perspective, as I said, but the current targets need support too.
Pick up a title that’s been challenged, especially in your community, and read it. Read it with no expectations of liking it or disliking it, wanting to protect it or wanting to ban it. It’s OK. Just enjoy it for what the author intended. I like the older titles for perspective, as I said, but the current targets need support too.
Library Lion’s Roar: ONE
LAST BIG ROAR
IFACTION
listserv. I get the daily digest of news
headlines in my email. The moderators
categorize the news into different sections, highlighting all the different
ways our access to information, knowledge, discussion, and the workings of our
government and media are supported or stifled.
Even if you don’t read all the articles, a scan of the headlines gives
you a good idea of what’s going on in the world and who wants to control what
information you can access.Let’s Link:
Librarian Blog and/or Library Blog: http://blog.spl.org/yablog/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SeattlePublicLibrary?ref=ts
Twitter: https://twitter.com/SPLBuzz
I
invite LL readers to click on the website for Banned Books Week and check out
all the events going on across the US week. Facebook, Tweet #BannedBooksWeek, and spread the word!
Love the red note on the Captain Underpants book. Simple and effective!
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