In October, We Read Banned Books!

A stack of books with a red prohibited circle and slash with the word Banned in large black letters

While Halloween decorations go up of spooky skeletons and evil ghosts, there is nothing scarier to a librarian than banned books.

There are two weeks in October dedicated to raising awareness about censorship and book banning in the United States. Banned Books Week (October 5th – 11th) has been organized since 1982 in support of free speech and the right to information access. More recently, advocates also began organizing Prison Banned Books Week (October 19th – 25th) to shed light on censorship in prisons. Keep reading to learn more fun (scary) facts about the current state of book bans, and to learn what banned books you can pick up at Cannell Library.  

Banned Books Week: October 5th – 11th 

Did you know?  

  • Attempts at book bans are increasing! The American Library Association (ALA) tracked challenges to 2,452 unique titles in 2024. The average yearly number from 2001 – 2020 was just… 273 titles! 
  • Book challenges are increasingly coming from organized pressure groups and decision-makers like elected officials or administrators. In 2024, 72% of book challenges came from these types of groups – up from 14% in 2015! 

Find Banned Books in Cannell:  

Check out our physical library display in the middle of the first floor, and take home a banned book of your own! Titles include:  

Black and yellow cover of the Watchmen, comic book by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons
The Watchmen, by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons

 

Blue cursive text on a white background, reading The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison
The Bluest Eye, by Toni Morrison, was the 3rd most challenged book of 2024 – despite being written in 1970!

Prison Banned Books Week 

Did you know?  

  • Prisons are the largest book censors in the country, but it varies widely by state. In 2022, Florida banned over 20,000 titles while Rhode Island banned only 68. Read more statistics about prison book bans nation-wide in this Guardian article: Link to article. 
  • Washington State doesn’t maintain a set list of banned books, but each book is reviewed individually with lots of room for discretion.  When Clark served students at the Larch Correctional Facility, our librarians had to navigate book challenges and censorship. 

Find Books Banned in Prisons at Cannell:  

Find a display of books banned in prisons, as well as books by incarcerated authors, on the first floor of Cannell Library. Here’s just two titles that our librarians weren’t allowed to bring into a Washington State Prison:  

Black typed text on a green and beige background, reading Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, by Bryan Stevenson
Just Mercy, by Bryan Stevenson, an award-winning book about a falsely accused man proving his innocence

 

Yellow and blue painted background with figurative sketches and illustrated text by Basquiat
Writing the Future: Basquiat and the Hip Hop Generation, exploring the connections between visual art and hip hop music

And here’s a few titles by incarcerated authors that you can also find at Cannell:

 

Bold black text on a red background, with an image of a bird collaged from notebook paper
The Many Lives of Mama Love, by Lara Love Hardin, a memoir of her experiences before, during, and after incarceration

 

A photograph of a black hand grasping a white set of prison bars, with the title text overlayed
Doing Time: 25 Years of Prison Writing, an anthology of stories by incarcerated writers

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