Book challenge report
This is the ACLU's Book Challenge Report (PDF) for Texas K-12 schools this year.
My most WTF?! moment came when I read that Drug Related Diseases by Barbara Hughes was challenged. The description is "Discusses a number of drugs, including alcohol, cocaine,heroin, and amphetamines, and the health problems that may result from their use or abuse." Yeah, banning the book that explains how these things can be bad for you makes total sense. (The report says the result was "Use Restricted," with no explanation for how it was restricted.)
My most WTF?! moment came when I read that Drug Related Diseases by Barbara Hughes was challenged. The description is "Discusses a number of drugs, including alcohol, cocaine,heroin, and amphetamines, and the health problems that may result from their use or abuse." Yeah, banning the book that explains how these things can be bad for you makes total sense. (The report says the result was "Use Restricted," with no explanation for how it was restricted.)

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Not a school library, but when I frequented Belle Sherman Kendall Branch Library in Houston, one of the things I read--there was a series of juvenile nonfiction books on drugs. Amphetamines, heroin, cocaine, glue-sniffing, alcohol, the works. Each drug had its own book, told in a mildly stern, dry tone, and complete with photos and warnings about the pretty icky things that taking these drugs could do to you. I read every. single. one. of these books. They resulted in my decision not to ever, ever, EVER go near recreational drugs (I later relented and decided cooking-amounts of alcohol was okay, only to be foiled by being put on medications that Don't Like Alcohol). Yeah.
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