The Orlando Sentinel reports:
A total of 673 books, from classics to best-sellers, have been removed from Orange County classrooms this year for fear they violate new state rules that ban making “sexual conduct” available to public school students.
The list also includes popular novels by Stephen King, Sue Monk Kidd and Jodi Picoult, classics like “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn,” “Jude the Obscure,” and “Madame Bovary,” and award-winning books like “A Thousand Acres,” “Beloved,” and “Love in the Time of Cholera.”
The rejected books include ones teachers say were once regularly taught in high school classes, such as “The Color Purple,” “Catch-22,” and “Brave New World.
Read the full article.
Orange schools reject 673 books from classroom libraries for fear they violate new Fl law. The rejected books include “Paradise Lost,” “East of Eden,” “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn” and “Madame Bovary.” Story and list (first obtained by @FLFreedomRead): https://t.co/xNWZldrgeS
— Leslie Postal (@lesliepostal) December 20, 2023
To fact-check Ron DeSantis’ claim that book bans in Florida are a “false narrative,” we started with the Florida Dept. of Education’s list of currently banned books https://t.co/rzGRjGtmRf
— PEN America (@PENamerica) December 3, 2023