The books that make you uncomfortable are the books that make you think.
Isn't that what school is supposed to do? It's supposed to make you think?
In the far, far suburbs of Houston, Texas, three teenagers
are talking at a coffee shop about a clandestine bookshelf in their public-school
classroom. It's filled with books that have been challenged or banned.
"Some of the books that I've read are books like Hood
Feminism, The Poet X, Gabi, A Girl in Pieces,"
says one of the girls. She's a 17-year-old senior with round glasses and long
braids. The books, she says, sparked her feminist consciousness. "I just
see, especially in my community, a lot of women being talked down upon and
those books [were] really nice to read."
These students live in a state that has banned more books
than nearly any other, according to PEN America. The Texas State
Board of Education passed a policy in late 2023 prohibiting
what it calls "sexually explicit, pervasively vulgar or educationally
unsuitable books in public schools." Over the past two years, Texas teachers have lost jobs or
been pressured to resign after making
challenged books available to students.
The teacher who created this bookshelf could become a
target for far right-wing groups. That's why NPR is not naming her, nor her
students.
"We don't want to jeopardize our teacher in any way,
or the bookshelf," another teenager explains. Until recently, he says, he
was not naturally inclined toward reading. But the secret bookshelf opened a
world of characters and situations he immediately related to. "Just to see
Latinos, like LGBTQ," he says. "That's not something you really see
in our community, or it's not very well represented at all."
The secret bookshelf began in late 2021, when then-state Rep. Matt Krause sent public schools a list of
850 books he wanted banned from schools. They might, he said,
"make students feel discomfort, guilt, anguish, or any other form of
psychological distress because of their race or sex."
That made this teacher furious. "The books that make
you uncomfortable are the books that make you think," she told NPR.
"Isn't that what school is supposed to do? It's supposed to make you
think?"
She swung into action, calling friends to support a
bookshelf that would include all of the books Krause wanted banned. Then she
enlisted a student to put it together. "I went through the list and found
the ones that I thought were cool," he recalled to NPR over a London Fog
latte. "And then she gave me her [credit] card and I bought them. It was a
lot of gay books, I remember that."
That same student came out as trans to his family while in
high school. "I wouldn't call them supportive, so I had to do a lot of
sneaking around," he said quietly. Now 19, he's graduated and works as a
host in a restaurant while deciding on his next move.
"Having these books, having these stories out there
meant a lot to me, because I felt seen," he said. Especially meaningful,
he added, during a fraught time when Texas lawmakers banned transition-related
care for teenagers. "Because of the way the laws are going for trans
people especially," he said, "it could be assumed that [my teacher
is] grooming kids. And that would be terrible because that's not what she's
doing at all."
NPR repeatedly reached out to former Texas lawmaker Matt
Krause for comment and got no response. He is currently running for county
commissioner in the Fort Worth area. The chief of communications for the public
school district thanked NPR for "highlighting this very important
topic," but said, "we're going to pass on this opportunity,"
when asked to comment on how administrators are implementing policies around
books that have been challenged.
"We've been seeing a climate of fear — and a variety
of self-censorship — going on by school leaders or librarians who do not
understand the implications of the law or are fearful for their jobs,"
said Carolyn Foote. She's a retired English teacher and librarian who
co-created the activist group Texas FReadom Fighters.
Kasey Meehan of the free speech advocacy group PEN America says
she's watched things in Texas escalate. She points to a teacher fired last year for sharing a
graphic novel with her students that showed Anne Frank having a romantic
daydream about another girl. Another teacher featured on an NBC podcast left her job
under pressure after making literature available to students featuring a
positive transgender character.
"Parents are taking books from schools and bringing
them to police or sheriff offices and accusing librarians and educators of
providing sexually explicit material to students," Meehan says.
"It does make me nervous," admitted the Houston
teacher with the secret bookshelf. "I mean, this is absolutely silly that
I am not free to talk about books without giving my name and worrying about
repercussions."
At some point, she hopes, it will no longer have to be a
secret.
Earlier this month, the U.S. Court of Appeals blocked part
of a recently passed state bill, known as HB 900, that would have required
booksellers and publishers to rate any books sold to schools for sexual
content. This was seen as a victory for freedom-to-read activists, but some of
them noted to NPR that HB 900 still contains dangerously vague language about
material prohibited in school and no clear guidelines about enforcement.
"I do believe that book banning is going to go
away," the teacher says, firmly. But for now she adds, "I
intend for this library to just keep growing."
Neda Ulaby reports on arts, entertainment, and cultural
trends for NPR's Arts Desk. Scouring the various and often overlapping
worlds of art, music, television, film, new media and literature, Ulaby's
stories reflect political and economic realities, cultural issues, obsessions
and transitions.
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