ALA Reports Year-Over-Year Decline in Book Bans

ALA Reports Year-Over-Year Decline in Book Bans

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Welcome to Today in Books, our daily round-up of literary headlines at the intersection of politics, culture, media, and more.

The Tide May Be Turning on Book Bans

Data from a preliminary report released by the American Library Association this week shows a sharp decline in attempts to ban materials in public, school, and academic libraries year-to-date. From January 1 to August 31 of this year, the ALA’s Office for Intellectual Freedom tracked 414 challenges addressing 1,128 titles, down from 695 challenges to 1,915 titles in the same period last year. That’s a decrease of about 40% in both cases and challenged titles, a welcome indicator that the tide may be turning after several years of steady increases in book banning resulted in 2023’s all-time high. The ALA attributes the shift to advocacy efforts, anti-censorship programming, and wins in key lawsuits.

It’s not time to take our feet off the gas yet, though. As Publishers Weekly notes:

While the decline in tracked challenges in the first part of 2024 is welcome news, the ALA’s statistics stand in contrast to a report also released this week by PEN America, which found that censorship in school libraries nearly tripled in the 2023-2024 school year, surpassing 10,000 book bans in public schools, up from 3,362 bans in the previous school year.

Want to do get involved? Run For Something‘s Amanda Litman joined us on this week’s Book Riot Podcast to share information about how to run for important local offices—like school and library boards—that have the power to impact policy and protect intellectual freedom.

Guess Who’s Back

Jeanine Cummins, who was widely criticized for cultural appropriation and misrepresenting her identity in promotion of her 2020 novel American Dirt, will be back on shelves next year with a novel called Speak to Me of Home. Predictable? Yes. Disappointing? Also yes.

Though Flatiron apologized for making “serious mistakes” in its marketing of American Dirt, they continued to support the title; after canceling some of Cummins’s tour events due to safety concerns, the publisher pivoted to a series of town hall meetings in which Cummins spoke with readers who had expressed concerns about the book. Oprah, who had selected American Dirt as a book club title, followed suit, offering Cummins a platform to discuss the controversy in a two-part interview. It’s a strategy for which they were handsomely rewarded—to date, American Dirt has sold more than 3 million copies—but Flatiron does seem to have learned something from the experience, as they are not involved in the new project. Can’t say the same for parent company Macmillan, though; Speak to Me of Home will be published by its Henry Holt imprint.

Barbie, Elvis, and…Emily Brontë?

Saltburn writer-director Emerald Fennell is set to adapt Wuthering Heights, and it looks like she’s swinging for another blockbuster. Margot Robbie has signed on to play Catherine Earnshaw, and Jacob Elordi, who worked with Fennell on Saltburn and played Elvis in Sofia Coppola’s biopic Priscilla, will play Heathcliff. Every generation gets its big-screen Brontë adaptation—as an elder millennial, I’ve pledged allegiance to the 1992 version with Juliette Binoche and Ralph Fiennes, and I don’t even like Wuthering Heights!—and it’s hard to imagine what would have to go wrong for this not to be a smash.

Read These Stories About Haitians and Haitian Americans

I think we all know why I’m linking to this today. Here’s Kendra Winchester on a short story collection about what it’s really like to be Haitian or Haitain American.

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