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Banned Book Series: All Boys Aren’t Blue
George M. Johnson’s All Boys Aren’t Blue, published in 2020, is a memoir-manifesto about growing up Black and queer in America.
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Jan 12 min read


Banned Book Series: How to Be an Antiracist
How to Be an Antiracist, published by Ibram X. Kendi in 2019, has become one of the most frequently challenged books in American schools and libraries. The reason is often dressed up as concern for age appropriateness or political neutrality. The reality is simpler.
smartbrowngirlllc
Dec 22, 20252 min read


Banned Book Series: Kindred
Kindred remains one of the most frequently challenged works by Octavia Butler. Official reasons cite violence, sexual assault, and harsh depictions of slavery. The deeper fear runs far deeper. Butler refused to let the past stay distant. She forced readers to see how history shapes identity and power in the present.
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Dec 2, 20252 min read


Banned Book Series: Homegoing
Homegoing stands out as one of the most powerful examinations of history’s long reach. Yaa Gyasi did something that made censors deeply uncomfortable. She refused to let the past remain isolated. She traced how trauma, displacement, and resilience move through families across centuries.
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Nov 29, 20252 min read


Banned Book Series: The Color Purple
The Color Purple has been banned for more than forty years, which is remarkable considering what the book actually does. Alice Walker wrote a story that refuses to let Black women be silent. It refuses to let trauma be hidden. And it refuses to let love, especially queer love, be defined by the people who benefit from erasing it.
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Nov 22, 20252 min read


Banned Book Series: Stamped and Silenced
The book Stamped is not radical because it invents new ideas. It is radical because it tells the honest story of how racism is embedded in American policies and systems, not just in individual actions. This honesty challenges the comforting myth of American innocence and that is what makes the book dangerous to some.
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Nov 16, 20253 min read


The New Jim Crow: They Banned the Truth About Justice
In 2010, Michelle Alexander published the influential book The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. This work has since sparked crucial conversations about race and the criminal justice system in America. Its main argument is striking: “We have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it.” This bold statement questions our understanding of race and justice today.
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Nov 5, 20254 min read
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