Tag: books

  • MAKE LIKE A BOOK AND GET BANNED

    MAKE LIKE A BOOK AND GET BANNED

    There’s a strange little story unfolding right now that says a lot more about us than it does about any single book.


    A controversial French novel, The Camp of the Saints by Jean Raspail, recently made its way back into the spotlight with an English edition. The book itself has always been divisive, centered around an invasion of migrants and the collapse of Western society. It’s not new. It’s not unknown. But suddenly, it was gone.
    Amazon pulled it.


    Then… just as quietly… it came back after a backlash.. .
    Some people believe the ban was needed.. other decried it .. It is not the first time that Amazon has pulled a book, just this time it was more noticeable..


    The Books That Keep Getting Pulled


    We’re living in a strange time where books—some old, some new, some classics, some uncomfortable—are constantly being challenged, removed, or avoided altogether.


    Here are some of the titles that have been repeatedly banned or challenged in recent years with a bit of a reason why:


    1984 – political themes, control, surveillance
    The Catcher in the Rye – language, rebellion, teenage angst
    Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – racial language and historical context
    The Perks of Being a Wallflower – trauma, sexuality, mental health
    Looking for Alaska – grief, identity, coming of age
    Gender Queer: A Memoir – gender identity and sexuality
    A Clockwork Orange – violence and disturbing themes
    Crank – drug use and addiction
    Forever… – teenage sexuality
    It – violence, horror, and controversial scenes involving children

    As a matter of fact, horror author Stephen King bragged the title of the MOST BANNED author in United States schools in general!


    Some of these books are decades old. Some of them were required reading not that long ago. And now, they’re showing up on lists of things that maybe students shouldn’t see.
    So… Who Is Actually Pushing This?


    On one side, you have organizations like PEN America and the American Library Association, actively tracking book bans and pushing back against them. Their argument is pretty simple: access to ideas matters, even the uncomfortable ones.

    On the other side, you have groups like Moms for Liberty and Parents’ Rights in Education, who are advocating for removing certain materials from schools, especially when they involve sexuality, race, or themes they believe are inappropriate for kids.

    And here’s the thing… most of these bans aren’t happening at some massive federal level but instead they’re happening quietly.
    School boards. District decisions and local meetings. Small votes that end up having a huge impact.


    In a lot of ways, this isn’t “top-down censorship.”
    It’s something closer to self-censorship… happening piece by piece.


    So book banning could be true deep mistake..
    Not because every book is good or because every idea deserves to be celebrated. Some ideas are uncomfortable. Some are outdated. Some are even offensive by today’s standards.
    But they existed and they were written, read, and a part of conversations at one point in time.


    And books… especially when you’re young… are a window to the world–the world could bright and happy or dark and dreary.


    They introduce you to ideas you’ve never thought about. Situations you’ve never experienced. Perspectives you might never encounter otherwise.


    I remember reading books in school that pushed boundaries. That made people uncomfortable. That sparked real conversations. And those conversations? They were good. They were controlled. They were thoughtful. There wasn’t hatred in the room.
    Kids aren’t born hateful.


    If anything, school is supposed to be the place where you learn how to think, not what to avoid.


    But now it feels like we’re taking that window… and instead of opening it wider…we’re shutting it, locking it, and then duct taping the edges just to make sure nothing gets through.


    Maybe That Discomfort Matters


    Maybe the point isn’t to agree with every book.
    Maybe the point is to wrestle with them.
    To question them. To push back. To understand why something was written the way it was—and whether it still holds up today.
    Because once you start removing everything that makes people uncomfortable…
    you don’t just lose the bad ideas.
    You lose the conversation entirely.
    And that might be the most dangerous part of all.

  • Never released J.D. Salinger writings yet to be shared with the public!

    Never released J.D. Salinger writings yet to be shared with the public!

    Engligh lit teachers rejoice!!

    Never-before-seen writing by The Catcher in the Rye author J.D. Salinger will be shared with the public in the future, his son says!

    Described as a “massive collection” by Matt Salinger in an interview with The Guardian, the works will be released at some future date..

    “This was somebody who was writing for 50 years without publishing, so that’s a lot of material,” Matt Salinger said. Most of the content was kept out of the public eye because of Salinger’s particular quirks.

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  • Book review: The Phantom Killer 

    Book review: The Phantom Killer 

    A dark night.. a window cracked open with a breeze blowing in.. a quiet corner in the confines of your home, safely lit with a lamp. Just enough to see around you.. not quite enough to get a good glance into the distance. That, my friends, is the way to read a book. 
    But as so often happens in life, my place to read a book is in a bathroom, a lunchroom cafeteria, or at my desk if I’m early enough to work that I can secure time to read a chapter or two..

     While the book may not be new to me, a great read I recently finished was THE PHANTOM KILLER:UNLOCKING THE MYSTERY OF THE TEXARKANA SERIAL MURDERS. It’s the story of a town in terror..
    Written by PH.D author James Presley from Texas, the book travels into the past and recounts the before and after effects of the multiple murders that rocked the post World War II landscape of Texarkana.. 

     I have written about the ‘phantom killer’ before. It remains an unsolved case—though so many by this time in history have theories as to the ‘whodunit’ of the story. Multiple killings happening at lovers lane led to an intense national buzz. It was not the first time global media descended on a small time—but given the time and state of America, it is amazing to see and analyze not only the true crime story but the pop culture and journalistic changes that happened because of the series of crimes at the hands of a masked perpetrator.
     
    As far as the crime itself, Presley details and documents the follies and attempts at investigating during the early stages of some of the crime scenes. Police mistakes, not accounting for an inventory of evidence.. the lack of DNA.. the fact that small town crimes were the normal calling for a police force. And these big headline murders were too much, at times..
     
    Journalism… headline writers had a field day. And once they captured the public’s imagination with the ‘phantom killer,’ all hell broke loose. Literally. More murders and with it fear—people locking windows, staring at neighbors a little more closely.. looking for killers underneath the shrubs. It is a small town mid-20th century vision of the fear that nationally would hit America in the post 9/11 landscape..
     Pop culture.. perhaps you did, or did not know, that there was a movie called THE TOWN THAT DREADED SUNDOWN made in the 70s.. it wasn’t a ‘true’ account but ‘inspired’ by such. Court cases attempted to stop the film. They did not work. Free form of art won.. and with it, a cult classic horror movie that had little to do with facts. Then came a remake in the 2000s—and the weirdest part? The town shows the original film every Halloween in a field near where the actual real life murders took place decades prior.. Talk about creepy..
     Presley’s book is a must read for those who really into true crime. And even those into psychology and the ultimate state of terror so often people can find themselves in. It sets the stage perfectly well.. the writing style, along with frequent descriptive accounts of the weather on any given day, offers a glimpse into the past. And sort of makes you feel like you’re there.. While you’re not reading the headlines in a newspaper, Presley’s ability to work those true headlines into print gives you the same chills it would have the people of Texarkana so many years ago.
    And … the truth the killer was not caught. At least not for the crimes of murder.. perhaps another crime or crimes. Read the book for more on that.

  • Book review: The Phantom Killer

    Book review: The Phantom Killer

    A dark night.. a window cracked open with a breeze blowing in.. a quiet corner in the confines of your home, safely lit with a lamp. Just enough to see around you.. not quite enough to get a good glance into the distance. That, my friends, is the way to read a book. 
    But as so often happens in life, my place to read a book is in a bathroom, a lunchroom cafeteria, or at my desk if I’m early enough to work that I can secure time to read a chapter or two..

     While the book may not be new to me, a great read I recently finished was THE PHANTOM KILLER:UNLOCKING THE MYSTERY OF THE TEXARKANA SERIAL MURDERS. It’s the story of a town in terror..
    Written by PH.D author James Presley from Texas, the book travels into the past and recounts the before and after effects of the multiple murders that rocked the post World War II landscape of Texarkana.. 

     I have written about the ‘phantom killer’ before. It remains an unsolved case—though so many by this time in history have theories as to the ‘whodunit’ of the story. Multiple killings happening at lovers lane led to an intense national buzz. It was not the first time global media descended on a small time—but given the time and state of America, it is amazing to see and analyze not only the true crime story but the pop culture and journalistic changes that happened because of the series of crimes at the hands of a masked perpetrator.
     
    As far as the crime itself, Presley details and documents the follies and attempts at investigating during the early stages of some of the crime scenes. Police mistakes, not accounting for an inventory of evidence.. the lack of DNA.. the fact that small town crimes were the normal calling for a police force. And these big headline murders were too much, at times..
     
    Journalism… headline writers had a field day. And once they captured the public’s imagination with the ‘phantom killer,’ all hell broke loose. Literally. More murders and with it fear—people locking windows, staring at neighbors a little more closely.. looking for killers underneath the shrubs. It is a small town mid-20th century vision of the fear that nationally would hit America in the post 9/11 landscape..
     Pop culture.. perhaps you did, or did not know, that there was a movie called THE TOWN THAT DREADED SUNDOWN made in the 70s.. it wasn’t a ‘true’ account but ‘inspired’ by such. Court cases attempted to stop the film. They did not work. Free form of art won.. and with it, a cult classic horror movie that had little to do with facts. Then came a remake in the 2000s—and the weirdest part? The town shows the original film every Halloween in a field near where the actual real life murders took place decades prior.. Talk about creepy..
     Presley’s book is a must read for those who really into true crime. And even those into psychology and the ultimate state of terror so often people can find themselves in. It sets the stage perfectly well.. the writing style, along with frequent descriptive accounts of the weather on any given day, offers a glimpse into the past. And sort of makes you feel like you’re there.. While you’re not reading the headlines in a newspaper, Presley’s ability to work those true headlines into print gives you the same chills it would have the people of Texarkana so many years ago.
    And … the truth the killer was not caught. At least not for the crimes of murder.. perhaps another crime or crimes. Read the book for more on that.