Not all penguin
stories are equal in the public's mind.
And Tango Makes Three, an award-winning
children's book based on a true story about two male
penguins who raised a baby penguin, topped the
American Library Association's annual list of works
attracting the most complaints from parents, library
patrons, and others.
Overall, the
number of ''challenged'' books in 2006 jumped to 546, more
than 30% higher than the previous year's total, 405,
although still low compared to the mid 1990s, when
challenges topped 750.
''We're still
in...the mid-range in terms of how many challenges we
get,'' Judith Krug, director of the ALA's Office for
Intellectual Freedom, told the Associated Press during
a recent interview.
And Tango Makes Three, by Justin Richardson and
Peter Parnell, was published in 2005 and named by the ALA as
one of the year's best children's books. But parents
and educators have complained that Tango Makes
Three advocates homosexuality, with challenges
reported in Southwick, Mass.; Shiloh, Ill.; and
elsewhere.
The ALA defines a
''challenge'' as a ''formal, written complaint filed
with a library or school requesting that materials be
removed because of content or appropriateness.'' For
every challenge listed, about four to five go
unreported, according to the library association. Krug said
30 books were actually banned last year.
''Books aren't
banned nearly as much now as they used to be, because
communities are much more active in fighting that,'' Krug
said about the bans, which can lead to books being
removed from both school and public libraries.
Other books on
the 2006 list include two by Nobel laureate Toni Morrison,
The Bluest Eye and the Pulitzer
Prize-winning Beloved, both cited for
language and sexual content; Cecily von Ziegesar's
popular Gossip Girls series, criticized for
sexual content and language; and Robert Cormier's
The Chocolate War, for language, violence,
and sexual content.
Krug said she has
statistics for challenged books through the first few
months of 2007, when there were widespread reports that
librarians were banning Susan Patron's The Higher
Power of Lucky, the story of a 10-year-old's
physical and spiritual journey that won the
prestigious Newbery Medal for the best children's book.
Librarians had
complained on an Internet list serve, LM_Net, about the
book's use of the word ''scrotum,'' the sac holding a man's
testicles. But when the Associated Press last February
contacted several librarians who had posted critical
comments, all said they were either carrying Higher
Power or hadn't decided.
Krug confirmed
that the ALA had received no reports of Higher Power
being banned or even challenged. The publisher, Simon
& Schuster, agreed, saying Tuesday that it had not
heard of any problems at libraries.
''When a book
gets in trouble, we usually learn about it pretty quickly,
like with Tango Makes Three. We knew about that
right away,'' said publicist Paul Crichton of Simon &
Schuster, which also released the penguin book.
''But to my
knowledge, that hasn't happened with Higher Power of
Lucky. That was a case of much ado about
nothing.''
The ALA, the
American Booksellers Association, and others in the
publishing community will hold their 26th annual Banned
Books Week from September 29 to October 6, featuring
works that have been banned or were threatened with
removal. (AP)