News
2005-11-22
Washington State school district bans novel about gay
teens
University Place,
Wash., school officials have removed a book about gay
teens from the district's library shelves
University Place,
Wash., school officials have removed a book about gay
teens from the district's library shelves following parents' complaints.
In banning Geography Club, superintendent
Patti Banks said she was alarmed by the "romanticized"
portrayal of a teen meeting a stranger at night in a
park after meeting the person—revealed to be a
gay classmate—in an Internet chat room. She said
her decision was not due to the gay theme of the novel,
written by Brent Hartinger of Tacoma.
"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 dated November 2 to two parents who
requested the book's removal. "To the extent that this book
might contradict that message, I have determined it
should not be in our libraries, in spite of other
positive aspects (e.g., a strong antiharassment theme)."
Parent Connie Claussen disagrees with Banks's
decision and said she plans to appeal 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," she said. "This is a really good
book for any student to read."
In the 2003 book, a teenager thinks he's the
only gay student in his high school until he learns
that his gay online chat room buddy is a popular
athlete at his school. The teen meets others, and they form
the school Geography Club, thinking the name will be
so boring no one else will join.
Banks had Geography Club withdrawn from
Curtis Junior High and Curtis Senior High school
libraries after a University Place couple with
children in both schools filed a written complaint
October 21 asking the district to remove the book. They
wrote that reading the book could result in a "casual
and loose approach to sex" and encourage the use of
Internet porn and the physical meeting of people
through chat rooms.
Curtis High librarian Judy Carlson helped Banks
make the decision regarding the book, even though
she had selected it for the library's collection based
on reviews. Students often checked the book out,
Carlson said, but after reading it, she felt it should have
more strongly emphasized the dangers of meeting people
through the Internet.
Geography Club is one of 10 nominees for the
Evergreen Young Adult Book Award 2006. It's received
favorable reviews and been placed on numerous
adolescent reading lists. Although the novel has been
challenged in other schools for its sexual content,
Hartinger said this issue with his book is a first.
"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." (AP)
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