Judy Blume: book banning now much worse in US than in 1980s - Children’s and young adult author of 1970 book Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret says growing intolerance must be challenged

By Emily Dugan The Guardian – Link, Archive

Judy Blume- book banning now much worse in US than in 1980s-min.jpg
(L-R) actress Rachel McAdams, writer/director Kelly Fremon Craig, actor Abby Ryder Fortson and author Judy Blume at an advance screening of the film adaptation of Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret. Photograph: Rob O’Neal/Florida Keys News Bureau/AFP/Getty Images

The author Judy Blume says a rise in intolerance in America has led to a “much worse” epidemic of book banning than she experienced in the 1980s.

The children’s and young adult author, whose frank depictions of adolescence and puberty have long caused controversy, said it was time to fight back against censorship.

Her 1975 novel, Forever, which deals with teenage sexuality, was one of 80 books banned in one Florida school district last month, for dealing with issues such as sex, race and gender.

In an interview on the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, Blume said of book banning: “I thought that was over, frankly … I came through the 80s when book banning was really at its height. And it was terrible. And then libraries and schools began to get policies in place and we saw a falling-off of the desire to censor books.

“Now it is back, it is back much worse – this is in America. It is back so much worse than it was in the 80s. Because it’s become political.”

Children’s stories have become the latest battleground in the culture wars. When Puffin Books removed some of the more pejorative language from new editions of Roald Dahl’s works, it prompted a backlash.

Public outrage is not new to Blume. When her book Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret was released in 1970, its candid portrayal of puberty caused plenty of uproar and library bans. Even her own children’s primary school refused to keep a copy.

Now a screen adaptation of the book is to be released in May, starring Abby Ryder Fortson, Rachel McAdams and Kathy Bates.

Blume said she cried when she finally got to see her work made into a film 53 years later. “I think it was my son who said to me: ‘Just wait until all those people who grew up with your books are in power in Hollywood and you’re going to see what happens.’ And I’m so glad that I’m around to see it.”

Blume’s books have sold more than 90m copies and been translated into at least 32 different languages.

Asked if she was concerned about intolerance in the US, Blume said: “Absolutely. Intolerance about everything: gender, sexuality, racism. It’s just reaching a point where again we have to fight back, we have to stand up and fight.”

Blume said she was also worried about censorship in teaching. Florida introduced a bill last month that may limit discussion of menstruation before the sixth grade and the state’s governor, Ron DeSantis, is proposing to restrict conversation about gender identity and sexual orientation in schools.

“I mean, that’s crazy. That is so crazy,” Blume said. “And it is so frightening that I think the only answer is for us to speak out and really keep speaking out, or we are going to lose our way.

“I mean, there’s a group of mothers now going around saying that they want to protect their children. Protect them from what? You know, protect them from talking about things? Protect them from knowing about things?

“Because even if they don’t let them read books, their bodies are still going to change and their feelings about their bodies are going to change. And you can’t control that. They have to be able to read, to question.”
 
I thought this bitch died years ago.

Listen, parents don't want their kindergarteners to be given soft core porn in the classroom and for little Billy to be told he's a girl instead of a boy because he wanted to play with a doll once. It's legit not that complicated.
 
Asked if she was concerned about intolerance in the US, Blume said: “Absolutely. Intolerance about everything: gender, sexuality, racism. It’s just reaching a point where again we have to fight back, we have to stand up and fight.”
I used to be a very tolerant man, but us humans with more than a handful of brain cells to jostle about have this nifty thing called "pattern recognition".

Like the fact you won't show what said banned books contain, or that certain "genders" and "sexualities" have a really high proclivity towards sexual abuse, or that certain races have certain inclinations towards behaviors that stick out like a sore thumb when viewed objectively.

But fuck me, I'm an evil nathzee farrite supremacist because I notice those things and begin to conclude "maybe open acceptance of people incompatible with your society and values isn't such a good idea", right?
 
“I mean, there’s a group of mothers now going around saying that they want to protect their children. Protect them from what? You know, protect them from talking about things? Protect them from knowing about things?"
Agreed, Ms. Blume. The Bible, Industrial Society and Its Future, Mein Kampf, and The Clansman should also be present in elementary school libraries and perhaps even included in school curriculum.

...What's the matter, you don't like that? Why are you so against children knowing and talking about things because of material that you yourself find objectionable? You hypocritical book-banning extremist.
 
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Did Judy Bloome go woke, or was she always? She was an author of relatively tame, (even Christian) young adult books in the 70’s & 80’s. Is the author of this piece slanting an old ladies words to fit their own narrative & agenda? Or is Blume part of it? All I recall is that her books were pretty tame, a young girl goes through adolescence & prays to God in “Are You There God, It’s Me Margaret?” Nothing graphic or over PG-13. Not exactly the horror-“queer” shit that troons sneak into elementary schools these days. I’ve got no leg in this fight, but knowing what I know, can’t help but wonder if this is another example of journalistic narrative building, using a relatively benign boomer author as a shield.
 
I remember being forced to read her shit when I was younger. It disinterested me from reading for quite a while for we also had to do writing assignment about them, I think they were about what exciting moments in the literature I liked or something. I have also noticed that org's that push for kids to read more literature don't push for educational shit they push boring bland shit like Judy Blume's. Botany books with basic recipes in them got me interested into reading stuff again but also led to my first coyote encounter.
 
We had to read Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing in elementary school. I think my teacher was trying to make me hate little kids.

If so, mission accomplished.
we didn't have to read it, but my fifth-grade teacher read it to us bit by bit. And dear god it was one of the reasons I absolutely HATE 1st person perspective (not the only reason; Black Beauty was another) narrative. Fudge was such an absolute monster (and the parents so woefully inept regardless of their disbelief in spanking) that I couldn't bring myself to read "Superfudge". I mean holy hell, what kind of sociopath-in-the-making swallows a red eared slider turtle WHOLE? (Hell, it shouldn't have even been physically possible! Kid shoulda choked on that turtle and died before it ever got to his stomach. At the VERY least he should have gotten fucking SALMONELLA.)

Moviebob got these books as a child when his older female cousin got tired of them and as a result I'm not surprised he's pozzed to hell. Hell, he even claimed that Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret got him not only laid, but into a threesome. The purpose of Judy Blume is to pozz children.
 
She's just a nice old lady.

She's remembering when people wanted to ban her books for talking about menstruation and the nitty-gritty of preteen angst, and so she's making the easy assumption that the same thing is happening again.

Almost certainly she hasn't read any of the new controversial books, and nobody's explained them to her in anything but broad strokes.
 
Fudge was such an absolute monster (and the parents so woefully inept regardless of their disbelief in spanking) that I couldn't bring myself to read "Superfudge".
10-year-old me thought the very end was incredibly fucked up, when Fudge EATS Peter's pet turtle.

This zoosadist little shit is supposed to be a cute kid?

I should write a fanfiction sequel, where Fudge grows up to be a sociopathic murderer.
 
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She's just a nice old lady.

She's remembering when people wanted to ban her books for talking about menstruation and the nitty-gritty of preteen angst, and so she's making the easy assumption that the same thing is happening again.

Almost certainly she hasn't read any of the new controversial books, and nobody's explained them to her in anything but broad strokes.
Don't you want grade-schoolers to know good blowie Joey form? I bet you voted for Trump!
 
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10-year-old me thought the very end was incredibly fucked up, when Fudge EATS Peter's pet turtle.

I should write a fanfiction sequel, where Fudge grows up to be a sociopathic murderer.
Even 9-10 year old me was like "Fuck you Judy Blume, a 5 -6 year old CANNOT successfully swallow an entire fucking TURTLE, even if it's like 2 inches wide, like literally physically impossible, children that age have DIED CHOKING on shit smaller than that" and then the fact that this was included was like HOLY FUCK JUDY BLUME YOU ABSOLUTE SOCIOPATH WHY DID YOU DO THIS. And then the very end, where "We got you a pet that's far too big for your brother to swallow". FUCK YOU JUDY BLUME FOR PUTTING THOSE WORDS IN PETER'S DAD'S MOUTH. And it was a dog, and he named the dog "Turtle".

Dumb bitch should have given Peter a goldfish and then have Fudge swallow it like some college fratboy prank. Still disgusting but that would have made more sense.
 
Listen faggots.

There's good book banning and there's bad book banning.

Good Book Banning.
-Anything written by a tranny/ gender warrior. Gender Queen by Maia, the book I eternally crusade against because this autistic smelly bitch couldn't wash her ass in middle school, suddenly makes her the person confused children should be learning from.

Everything else is bad book banning.

Now. This issue really burns my ass because everytime there's a book banning, NOBODY EVER LISTS THE FUCKING BOOKS BEING BANNED. They always try to squeeze awful degenerate shit like Gender Queer, inbetween powerful novels such as the Bluest Eye or Catcher in the Rye. Two novels that, while powerful are restricted for obvious reasons and it is usually the parent's choice to let their child read these books.

So the list they're refering to is the following.

"Mighty Jack and the Goblin King" by Ben Hatke

Fantasy shit.

"A Court of Mist and Fury" by Sarah J. Maas

"A Court of Thorns and Roses" Sarah J. Maas

"A Court of Wings and Ruin" Sarah J Maas

Twilight but even tweener.

"Beloved" by Toni Morrison
A real novel that requires a permission slip due to maturity and content.

"Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close" by Safran Foer
A 9/11 sob story. Should be parental guidence.

"Forever" by Judy Blume
Usually given as optional reading material.

"Hopeless" by Colleen Hoover
Another YA Romance Shitfest.

"Losing Hope" by Colleen Hoover

"The Carnival at the Bray" by Jessie Ann Foley

"The Handmaid's Tale" by Margaret Attwood

WHO.
THE
FUCK
WOULD
GIVE
THIS
TO
CHILDREN?
Disregarding Attwood's rape fantasies and hilarious racism, it's high school material at the least. It serves no merit to actually read, but I am actually glad SOMEONE is trying to get people to read it rather than quote that lame ass tv show.

"The Perks of Being a Wallflower" by Stephen Chbosky

"Thirteen Reasons Why" by Jay Asher
This book is shit and shouldn't be read by ayyone.

"Wicked: Life & Times of the Wicked Witch of the West" by Gregory Maquire

"Almost Perfect" by Brian Katcher

"Damsel" by Elana K. Arnold

"Empire of Storms" by Sarah J. Maas

"Living Dead Girl" by Elizabeth Scott

"Kingdom of Ash" by Sarah J. Maas

"Looking for Alaska" by John Green

"More Happy Than Not" by Adam Silvera

"Nineteen Minutes" by Jodi Piccoult

Nineteen Minutes Jodi Piccoult

Shine Lauren Myracle

"Shine" by Lauren Myracle

"Sold" by Patricia McCormick

"The Bluest Eye" by Toni Morrison

"The Freedom Writer's Diary" by Erin Gruwell

"The Hate U Give" by Angie Thomas

"The Kite Runner" by Khaled Hosseini

"Change of Heart" by Jodi Picoult

"Drama" by Raina Telgemeier

"Handle with Care" by Jodi Picoult

"House Rules" by Jodi Picoult

"Keeping Faith" by Jodi Picoult

"Leaving Time" by Jodi Picoult

"Lone Wolf" by Jodi Picoult

"Looking for Alaska" by John Green

"Maximum Ride: Angel" by James Patterson

"Maximum Ride: Fang" by James Patterson

"Maximum Ride: Max" by James Patterson

"Maximum Ride: Maximum Ride Forever" by James Patterson

"Maximum Ride: Nevermore" by James Patterson

"Maximum Ride: Saving the World & Other Extreme Sports" by James Patterson

"Maximum Ride: School's Out Forever" by James Patterson

"Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment" by James Patterson

"Maximum Ride: The Final Warning" by James Patterson

"Mercy" by Jodi Picoult

"My Sister's Keeper" by Jodi Picoult

"Perfect Match" by Jodi Picoult

"Picture Perfect" by Jodi Picoult

"Plain Truth" by Jodi Picoult

"Salem Falls" by Jodi Picoult

"Second Glance" by Jodi Picoult

"Sing You Home" by Jodi Picoult

"Songs of a Humpback Whale" by Jodi Picoult

"The Absolute True Diary of a Part-Time Indian" by Sherman Alexie

"The Pact" by Jodi Picoult

"The Storyteller" by Jodi Picoult

"The Tenth Circle" by Jodi Picoult

"Vanishing Acts" by Jodi Picoult

"All American Boys" by Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely

"Fade," Book 2 in the "Wake Trilogy" series, by Lisa McMann

"Ghost Boys" by Jewell Parker Rhodes

"Heroine" by Mindy McGinnis

"Juliet Takes A Breath" by Gabby Rivera

"Life is Funny" by E.R. Frank

"Me and Earl and the Dying Girl" by Jesse Andrews

"Monday's Not Coming" by Tiffany D. Jackson

"Speak" by Laurie Halse Anderson

"Stamped: Racism, Antiracism and You" by Jason Reynolds

"The Breakaways" by Cathy G. Johnson

"The Lovely Bones" by Alice Sebold
Out of principle, this should be banned due to being complete lies. She ruined the reputation of an innocent man.

"The Nowhere Girls" by Amy Reed

"Tower of Dawn," Book 6 in the "Throne of Glass" series, by Sarah J. Maas

"Unravel Me" by Tahereh Mafi

"I am not your Mexican Daughter" by Erika Sanchez

"L8rG8r" by Lauren Myracle

"America" by E.R. Frank

"Ask the Passengers" by A.S. King

"Gabi, a Girl in Pieces" by Isabel Quintero

"Go Ask Alice" Anonymous

"Ramona Blue" by Julie Murphy

"The Art of Racing in the Rain" by Garth Stein

"The Female of the Species" by Mindy McGinnis

"The Truth About Alice" by Jennifer Mathieu

"Where I End and You Begin" by Preston Norton


It's 90% Fantasy Shit. With , the usual suspect , Bluest Eye in there.

This entire list a false flag. There's almost nothing absolutely degenerate on this list. Yes, there is a lot of shit that is wildly inapproriate for children, but not high schoolers on this list.

What do I mean it's a flase flag? It's bait. It's not like the other banned book list that included Gender Queer and other shit that should have you on a sex offender registry if you offered it to children.
 
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