Brent Hartinger ([info]brentsbrain) wrote,

Update: THEY'VE BANNED GEOGRAPHY CLUB!

For those of you just joining us, I am the author of a gay teen novel, GEOGRAPHY CLUB, and its sequel, THE ORDER OF THE POISON OAK. Last week, I wrote how GEOGRAPHY CLUB had been banned at a school district in my hometown.

Today the s##t hit the f#n in the form of an article on the front page of the daily newspaper. (On Tuesday, the newpaper will hopefully print my essay response!)

Today's article is behind a free-subscription firewall, so I'll quote some of the article here:

UNIVERSITY PLACE DISTRICT BANS NOVEL ABOUT GAY TEENS

by DEBBY ABE, The News Tribune

Acting on a parent complaint, University Place schools Superintendent Patti Banks has removed a novel about gay teens from district library shelves.

Banks said her decision had nothing to do with the theme of homosexuality in "Geography Club." Instead, she was alarmed by the "romanticized" portrayal of a teen meeting a stranger at night in a park after connecting with that person - who turns out to be a gay classmate - through an Internet chat room.

While the book has been challenged by other schools for its sexual content, author Brent Hartinger of Tacoma said this is the first time he's heard it challenged on the chat room issue.

"We want to send a strong consistent message to all our students that meeting individuals via the Internet is extremely high-risk behavior," Banks wrote in a letter Nov. 2 to two parents who requested the book's removal.

Later in the article...

"This is the most bogus thing I've heard of," parent Connie Claussen said of Banks' reasoning.She believes the book handles the chatroom issue responsibly by presenting the dangers of meeting a stranger through the Internet. Before meeting the stranger, the main character learns enough information about the chat-line buddy that he realizes it's a student at his school.

Claussen plans to appeal the book's removal to the district school board.

"It is about gay students. However, the most important part of the book is that it's about bullying, outcasts, about tolerance," said Claussen. "This is a really good book for any student to read."

And later...

In the 2003 book, a teen thinks he's the only gay kid in his high school until he learns that his online, gay chatroom buddy is a popular athlete at the same school. He meets other gay kids, and they form the school Geography Club, thinking the name will be so boring no one else will join.

The book has received favorable reviews and been placed on numerous adolescent reading lists. It's one of 10 nominees for the Evergreen Young Adult Book Award 2006.

While the book has survived numerous ban attempts in school and public libraries, Hartinger said many librarians tell him they wish they could stock his book but won't for fear of parent complaints.

Most challenges stem from its gay teen subject matter - not because of the chat room plot device.

"The reason gay teens are drawn to the Internet is that's a safe place to explore their identity without being harassed or bullied," Hartinger said. "It's ironic my book would be pulled for this reason, contributing to this atmosphere of silence and gay intolerance."

The issue arose when a University Place couple, with children in the junior and senior high schools, expressed concerns about the book to the schools' joint PTSA President Marge Ceccarelli.

"I told them we were not going to censor books and what books the librarians can buy," Ceccarelli said. She referred them to district officials.

The couple filed a written complaint Oct. 21 asking the district to remove the book.

They wrote that reading the book could result in a "casual and loose approach to sex," encourage use of Internet porn and chatrooms, and the physical meeting of people through chatrooms.

And later...

River Ridge High School English teacher Liz Price said she doesn't think the book would encourage kids to meet strangers through the Internet.

She leads a book discussion group of parents and students that is reading "Geography Club" this month.

"We tell them all the time that's not safe behavior," she said. "I think kids are smart enough to differentiate between what's a good idea to do in real life and what's being represented in a work of fiction."

Curtis senior Ethan Nicely doubts reading about meeting someone through the Internet would prompt students to do the same.

"It's just a book," he said. "If kids want to read that, they should be able to. No one's forcing them to read it."


It's all cool,

Brent Hartinger, Polluter of Young Minds
GRAND & HUMBLE (coming in January 2006!)
THE ORDER OF THE POISON OAK
THE LAST CHANCE TEXACO
GEOGRAPHY CLUB
Explore "Brent's Brain"
See "The Big Gay Picture"

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  • 27 comments

[info]queen_of_ocd

November 20 2005, 21:41:59 UTC 6 years ago

Some people were just put on this earth to make trouble. Perhaps when they become literate, they will read your books and realize that banning them is against the first Amendment to the US Constitution.

[info]brentsbrain

November 21 2005, 07:47:47 UTC 6 years ago

Ha!

[info]queen_of_ocd

November 21 2005, 12:40:18 UTC 6 years ago

Okay, that was a bit rude. I was not happy. But I did write about you in my lj yesterday.

[info]writerboi

November 20 2005, 23:05:01 UTC 6 years ago

Outrage!

I am using Geography Club as the basis for my thesis project in my Writing, Style, and Technology class here at Eastern Michigan University. I am sure the class and instructor will be outraged that it was banned, especially for the reasons you have expressed. We have looked at all the issues the book discussed many times, and I feel, as well as many of my colleagues, that it belongs on the shelves of ever middle school, high school and all public libraries, as it is offers great value to all teens, regardless of sexual identity. Please keep me updated.
Steven V Rice srice1@emich.edu

[info]_heartsong_

November 21 2005, 00:13:01 UTC 6 years ago

Hi- I'm doing a paper on a controversial issue and have been pointed toward your blog by some wonderful authors. I thought banned books would be a unique "issue" to explore, and it looks like I have come to the right blog! Although I have not read your book, I'll be sure to get on it as soon as humanly possible becuase it sounds like a great one to base my report upon! Just thought I should "introduce" myself. Thanks.

[info]brentsbrain

November 21 2005, 08:08:49 UTC 6 years ago

Ha! Thanks. Yeah, really good timing on your part! Let me know if you have any questions. I'm trying to make lemonade out of this whole crazy situation.

brentsbrain@harbornet.com

[info]scarlet_crow

November 21 2005, 03:11:35 UTC 6 years ago

I wrote an email to a woman on something very similar to this. She was saying how Harry Potter would cause its readers to abandon their faith and follow satan...same deal, but less intense right? There are way worse things to read out there. If people started to ban any remotely controverial book, then half the bookshelves in the world would be empty.
I am officially frustrated.

[info]brentsbrain

November 21 2005, 08:11:05 UTC 6 years ago

Yes, and the books that did make it out would be pretty damn boring. But the thing is, you can't ever predict EVERYTHING that will upset someone. It's impossible.

[info]scarlet_crow

December 7 2005, 02:00:32 UTC 6 years ago

If only people were less easily upset in the first place.

[info]brentsbrain

December 7 2005, 02:03:46 UTC 6 years ago

Then they'd have to, oh I don't know...GET A LIFE!!

[info]mourning_flower

November 21 2005, 03:48:26 UTC 6 years ago

Oh My Gods. I mean, come on! "We want to send a strong consistent message to all our students that meeting individuals via the Internet is extremely high-risk behavior," I never got that impression when I was reading the book and I am a high schooler who enjoys the fun times of the internet. And come on! It was like, only two pages.
"The reason gay teens are drawn to the Internet is that's a safe place to explore their identity without being harassed or bullied," And isn't that funny? I mean, they should really take into concideration what is said here. Look where kids have to go to be themselves. Look where they have to hide. I mean, if you want them to be safe, then let them feel safe.
But that's a stupid thing to be banned for... And what about the kids? Have they ever asked kids? Every time I read an artical about a book being banned or challanged, it is always a parental unit that is demanding, demanding the removal of "the vial language and images that are raging havoc on their kids." Do they ever think that we learn from these things? Ug.
Sorry for the rant. I just don't see why people are like this. We are slowly losing the wonderful language that books bring us and whenever something new comes out, people have to have a cow over it. If you don't like it, don't read it. Like Nicely said, "If kids want to read that, they should be able to. No one's forcing them to read it."

[info]mourning_flower

November 21 2005, 03:52:12 UTC 6 years ago

And what about porn? I mean, that is ugly stuff and you can jsut go down the block to your locak 24 hour corner store and pick one up. THOSE are not banned!

[info]brentsbrain

November 21 2005, 08:10:13 UTC 6 years ago

Yup, that's it. If someone is horribly offended, they can stop reading. But since this is the first time I've heard this criticism, I suspect 99.99999999% of my readers get the point of the scene completely.

[info]tbass

November 21 2005, 07:40:57 UTC 6 years ago

You don't know me or anything, but, I just bought Geography Club the other day after reading some of your livejournal posts. I'm planning on reading it tonight.

[info]brentsbrain

November 21 2005, 07:50:28 UTC 6 years ago

Well, be prepared to have your mind horribly polluted. :-)

[info]tbass

November 21 2005, 19:01:12 UTC 6 years ago

Wow, the book was pretty amazing. I've never read a book that captured what it's like for an in-the-closet highschool student... much less captured it as perfectly as you did. I remember feeling exactly like that a lot of the time. Great job!

[info]brentsbrain

December 7 2005, 05:10:56 UTC 6 years ago

Nice! I hope you like it, otherwise this could be very embarrassing... ;-)

[info]almafullerton

November 21 2005, 16:21:22 UTC 6 years ago

Brent, Glad to see you and others are fighting back on this issue. It's something a lot of writers are going to have to deal with - me included. You are an inspiration.

[info]brentsbrain

November 21 2005, 20:36:01 UTC 6 years ago

Thanks, that means a lot. :-)

Anonymous

November 21 2005, 20:07:28 UTC 6 years ago

Hi Brent,

Just wanted you to know that I've posted a little bit about this at Seattle Metroblogs (http://seattle.metblogs.com/archives/2005/11/banned_books_ta.phtml). I hope everything turns out alright in the end.

Samantha

[info]brentsbrain

November 21 2005, 20:35:26 UTC 6 years ago

Thank you very much!

[info]ammichaels

November 22 2005, 19:06:53 UTC 6 years ago

God! Stuff like this really makes me mad. So stupid! I'm going to post about it on my blog.

Anonymous

December 7 2005, 02:05:04 UTC 6 years ago

The good thing about all this is that people are at least talking about books and censorship, and other important things.

Anonymous

December 20 2005, 16:38:01 UTC 6 years ago

lmfao

how the hell can people ban books???? that is crazzy. i hope this book doesnt get banned. it was awesome... brent hartinger is an awesum author and doesnt deserve 2 go through this s**t. ill try and do anything i can to help. :-)

[info]brentsbrain

December 20 2005, 20:56:05 UTC 6 years ago

Re: lmfao

Thanks! That means a lot.
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