At first this is about dumbing down of America. But then, it is about banned books.
Not just banning story books. The schools are now banning academic books. Books that are good, but might take some afford to finish the whole books.
"In 2010 the sixth circuit upheld the firing of high school teacher Shelley Evans-Marshall when parents complained about an assignment in which she had asked her students in an upper-level language arts class to look at the American Library Association's list of "100 most frequently challenged Books" and write an essay about censorship. The complaint against her centered on three specific texts: Hermann Hesse's Siddhartha, Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird and Ray Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451. (She was also alleged, years earlier, to have shown students a PG-13 version of Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet.)"
Seriously, reading books would not hurt anyone, unless the readers were led to believe that it is "divine words of some god".
"Happily, there is pushback occurring against such anti-intellectualism. One of the most vibrant examples is a protest group called Librotraficante, or Book Trafficker. Organised by Tony Diaz, a Houston Community College professor, the group has been caravanning throughout the south-west holding readings, setting up book clubs, establishing "underground libraries," and dispensing donated copies of the books that have been removed from Arizona's public school curriculum. You can donate by visiting librotraficante.com."
Good to know.
Harper Lee’s recently discovered sequel to To Kill a Mockingbird was published today, and it is already so successful that her Lawyer announced there might be a third “discovered” manuscript. Other publishers are jumping in on the sequel craze. Here are some discovered sequels to literary classics coming out this year:
Lunch at Tiffany’s by Truman Capote
The Cul-De-Sac by Cormac McCarthy
The Raisins of Wrath by John Steinbeck
Back with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell
Moby-Dick 2: The College Years by Herman Melville
The Great Gatsby 2: Dead and Loving It by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Mrs Dalloway 2: Space Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
Fatherless Bronx by Jonathan Lethem
Midnight’s Tweens by Salman Rushdie
A Remix of Ice and Fire by George R. R. Martin
Okay, Let Me Go Already! by Kazuo Ishiguro
2667 by Roberto Bolano
2 Pride 2 Prejudice by Jane Austen
According to the New York Times, To Kill a Mockingbird was on its best seller list for 98 weeks, but weirdly never made it to number one. Here's the list for the week it debuted--I've heard of several of these books but the only other one I've read is Hawaii:
Here's a link to the first chapter of Go Set a Watchman, which finds Scout in her early 20s, returning to Maycomb, Alabama.