2013 Banned Books Week at Vassar

It may seem hard to believe that many institutions ban certain books from circulation and forbid the reading of them. There are some obvious and famous examples of books being banned in school systems; such as Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn or Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species. There are also some not-so obvious instances, like the children’s books The Witches or James and the Giant Peach both by Roald Dahl.

In the last week of September, the American Library Association promotes Banned Books Week, an awareness campaign for censorship of media in today’s culture. This year BBW will be from September 22nd to 28th and Vassar is proudly participating. Within Main Library there will be information posted about resources that are “banned” and “challenged.” Additionally, bookmarks will be available for students to take, detailing the disputes of specific cases. Be sure to check out the displays and a book!

BBW began in 1982 by Judith Krug as a response to First Amendment decisions which applied to libraries, bookstores, schools, and intellectual freedoms. Teaching “the importance of our First Amendment rights and the power of literature,” and drawing “attention to the danger that exists when restraints are imposed on the availability of information in a free society.” In 2012, ALA celebrated the 30th anniversary of BBW with an interactive timeline of significant challenges for each year.

The timeline can be found here: 30th Anniversary Timeline.

More information about BBW can be found at ALA.org and around Main Library!

Summer Reading Suggestions

 index3 Brunt, Carol Rifka. Tell the Wolves I’m Home. New York: Dial Press, c2012

This is a beautiful story of love and friendship; a coming of age tale with a backdrop of 1980s New York during the tragic AIDS epidemic before AZT. The young protagonist’s voice is so sensitively realized and acutely honest that more than one reviewer evokes Scout from To Kill a Mockingbird in their description of this debut novel.
 fowlercover Fowler, Karen Joy. We Are All Completely Besides Ourselves. New York: Putnam, 2013.

From the author of The Jane Austen Book Club, this novel about a family, science and humanity is next on my reading list. Reviewers are describing its themes as compassion, truth, love and tragedy and friends have mentioned it’s hard to put down.
 index Wolitzer, Meg. The Interestings. New York : Riverhead Books, 2013


I might be the only librarian who hasn’t read this book yet; everyone is talking about it! It’s about a group of friends who met at a summer camp for artsy teens in 1974 and stayed in touch into adulthood. It’s receiving exceptional reviews and sounds like a great summer read.
 index4 Ferrante, Elena. My Brilliant Friend, trans. Ann Goldstein. New York: Europa Editions, 2012.

This novel is the first in a trilogy by this important popular Italian author.  By following the close friendship of two women starting with their 1950s childhood, this story illustrates the transformation of their relationship and the significant changes experienced in their neighborhood and country. It will make you want to read her other books!