American Library Association's "The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 1990-2000"

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Each year, the American Library Association (ALA) records hundreds of attempts by individuals and groups to have books removed from libraries shelves and from classrooms. These are those books most banned between the years 1990 and 2000.

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  1. 1.
    Scary Stories Boxed Set
    by Alvin Schwartz

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  2. 2.
    Daddy's Roommate (Alyson Wonderland)
    by Michael Willhoite

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  3. 3.
    I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
    by Maya Angelou

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  4. 4.
    The Chocolate War (Laurel Leaf Books)
    by Robert Cormier

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  5. 5.
    The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Penguin Classics)
    by Mark Twain

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  6. 6.
    Of Mice and Men (Penguin Great Books of the 20th Century)
    by John Steinbeck

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  7. 7.
    Harry Potter series
    by J.K. Rowling

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  8. 8.
    Forever
    by Judy Blume

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  9. 9.
    Bridge to Terabithia
    by Katherine Paterson

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  10. 10.
    ?

  11. 12.
    My Brother Sam Is Dead (Point)
    by James And Chris Collier

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  12. 13.
    The Catcher in the Rye

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  13. 14.
    The Giver
    by Lois Lowry

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  14. 15.
    ?

  15. 16.
    ?
    Goosebumps (Series) by R.L. Stine

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  16. 17.
    A Day No Pigs Would Die
    by Robert Newton Peck

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  17. 18.
    The Color Purple
    by Alice Walker

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  18. 19.
    Sex
    by Madonna

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  19. 21.
    The Great Gilly Hopkins
    by Katherine Paterson

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  20. 22.
    A Wrinkle in Time
    by Madeleine L'Engle

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  21. 23.
    Go Ask Alice
    by Anonymous

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  22. 24.
    Fallen Angels
    by Walter Dean Myers

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  23. 26.
    The Stupids (Series)
    by Harry Allard

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  24. 27.
    The Witches (Puffin Novels)
    by Roald Dahl

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  25. 28.
    The New Joy of Gay Sex
    by Charles Silverstein

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  26. 29.
    Anastasia Krupnik (Series)

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  27. 30.
    The Goats

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  28. 32.
    Blubber
    by Judy Blume

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  29. 33.
    Killing Mr. Griffin (Laurel Leaf Books)
    by Lois Duncan

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  30. 34.
    Halloween ABC
    by Eve Merriam

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  31. 35.
    We All Fall Down
    by Robert Cormier

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  32. 37.
    The Handmaid's Tale: A Novel
    by Margaret Atwood

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  33. 38.
    Julie of the Wolves (Julie of the Wolves)
    by Jean Craighead George

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  34. 39.
    The Bluest Eye (Oprah's Book Club)
    by Toni Morrison

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  35. 41.
    To Kill a Mockingbird
    by Harper Lee

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  36. 42.
    Beloved
    by Toni Morrison

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  37. 43.
    The Outsiders
    by S. E. Hinton

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  38. 44.
    The Pigman
    by PAUL ZINDEL

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  39. 45.
    Bumps in the Night
    by Harry Allard

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  40. 46.
    Deenie
    by Judy Blume

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  41. 47.
    Flowers for Algernon (Bantam Classic)
    by Daniel Keyes

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  42. 48.
    Annie on My Mind
    by Nancy Garden

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  43. 49.
    The Boy Who Lost His Face
    by Louis Sachar

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  44. 50.
    ?
    Cross Your Fingers, Spit in Your Hat
    by Alvin Schwartz

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Created by Robot Co-op on Nov 30, 2005.
 

Comments

Pages: Pages: 1

buocl
Medina

Just fixed the list — 1 year ago

Please do not change it, unless it is to better follow the list source.


I'm so glad ... — 1 year ago

... that I grew up in a time when my teacher read James and the Giant Peach to our class, and Flowers for Algernon, To Kill a Mockingbird, Huck Finn and ACTUAL SCIENCE were taught in schoolrooms.

Where did these book-banning people grow up? The Middle Ages? Germany in the ‘30s? I’m sort of surprised that Galileo’s Daughter hasn’t made the list.


UTbutterfly03
Houston

Harry Potter...? — 2 years ago

Seriously…they tried to ban Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets? Why on earth?

I’ve read several of these books and I’m fine. Two of my all time favorites, The Giver and The Outsiders, I read countless times. The Catcher in the Rye I also thought was amazing.


spiral_dream
Reading

waldo? — 2 years ago

For those of you who are wondering about how this book is banned… There is a topless woman in a beach scene. quite silly


WLoper
Lodi

wheres waldo — 2 years ago

wheres waldo? what?


Jessica
Lakewood

Judy Blume — 2 years ago

I read all of Judy Blume’s books (except, I think that I missed Tiger Eyes) when I was young and I turned out just fine. I think that I even read Forever when I was twelve or thirteen and it didn’t make me a slut. When you are a young girl and you read those books, they make you feel like you are not going through something crazy and weird. I still don’t understand why they always cause such a stir.


drinkgoodtea
Saint Thomas

banned books week — 2 years ago

I work at a public library and I decided to create a display for Banned Books Week in Sept. 06. I used this list, some lists of historically banned books, and the recent annual lists from ALA. I put a label on each book with an description of its particular challenges or bans.

The display was a huge hit! People were shocked that books are ‘still’ banned and challenged, people learned about the situation, people talked about it, and people read the books in huge numbers. Yay!


Susan Reed
Redlands

Where's Waldo? — 3 years ago

Wow, some of these are truly surprising…
Everyone should have “Where did I come from” on their shelves as a kid- great illustrations that are kid-appropriate and yet not wishy washy.

can I just say three cheers to :
Judy Blume
Stephen King
and Toni Morrison
for raising so much cain? Excelent work you three!


Perlle
East Hampton

Jenny Davis' Sex Education — 3 years ago

The wrong book was on the list, so I corrected it. Funny, that this one was banned for murder instead of sex.


Perlle
East Hampton

I resisted... — 3 years ago

adding this list for a long time because of all the sex ed books. I really have no interest in reading those, but on principle, I think we should all read the books others have deemed dangerous enough to ban. What better way to vote against censorship?



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