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Penguin tale tops list of `challenged' books

NEW YORK - A children's story about a family of penguins with two fathers once again tops the list of library books the public objects to the most.

"And Tango Makes Three," released in 2005 and co-written by Justin Richardson and Peter Parnell, was the most "challenged" book in public schools and libraries for the second straight year, according to the American Library Association.

"The complaints are that young children will believe that homosexuality is a lifestyle that is acceptable. The people complaining, of course, don't agree with that," Judith Krug, director of the ALA's Office for Intellectual Freedom, told The Associated Press on Tuesday.

The ALA defines a "challenge" as a "formal, written complaint filed with a library or school requesting that materials be removed because of content or appropriateness."

Other books on the ALA's top 10 list include Maya Angelou's memoir "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," in which the author writes of being raped as a young girl; Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," long attacked for alleged racism; and Philip Pullman's "The Golden Compass," an anti-religious work in which a former nun says: "The Christian religion is a very powerful and convincing mistake."

Pullman's novel, released in 1996, received new attention last year because of the film version starring Nicole Kidman.

Overall, the number of reported library challenges dropped from 546 in 2006 to 420 last year, well below the mid-1990s, when complaints topped 750. For every challenge listed, about four to five go unreported, the library association estimates.

"The atmosphere is a little better than it used to be," Krug says. "I think some of the pressure has been taken off of books by the Internet, because so much is happening on the Internet."

According to the ALA, at least 65 challenges last year led to a book being pulled.

In Louisville, Ky., a high school principal told 150 English students to drop "Beloved," Toni Morrison's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about an ex-slave who has murdered her baby daughter. At least two parents had complained that "Beloved" includes depictions of violence, racism and sex.

In Burlingame, Calif., Mark Mathabane's "Kaffir Boy," a memoir about growing up poor and black in apartheid-era South Africa, was banned from an intermediate school after a parent complained about a two-paragraph scene in which men pay boys for sex.


SOURCE: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080506/ap_en_ot/challenged_books


Click to view image: '180196-tango.jpg'

Added: May-8-2008 
By: Bad Bubby
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Tags: book, ban, homosexuality, morality, christians
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  • How strange, I just sent a copy of this to Fils290!

    Posted May-8-2008 By 

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  • This is true! After the female hatches the egg, she goes away to feed. The male bird looks after the chick.Its natural history.

    Posted May-8-2008 By 

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  • Maybe if one of the penguins was trans-gendered it would bridge the understanding.

    Posted May-8-2008 By 

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  • yes lets teach children about gay ass sex...what could possibly go wrong?

    lmao

    Posted May-8-2008 By 

    (-1)

    • The book is based on the true story of 2 male penguins in Central Park Zoo who tried to hatch a rock as if it were an egg. They were given an egg from another pair, and hatched the egg and raised a healthy penguin chick. I don't know where you're getting "teaching children about gay ass sex" from. Projecting, maybe?

      Posted May-8-2008 By 

      (1)

    • In real life the penquins did end up trying to mate with each other. It was a true homosexual animal relationship and not just about two males taking care of an egg. I listened to a whole radio show on this recently. I don't think the book is really that big of a deal, but it is about homosexuality and not just about two males that work together.

      Posted May-8-2008 By 

      (0)