Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya
A boy and his magical grandmother battle evil while going to church and finding fish gods. Also, the farmer and the cowman can be friends.
Banned
1992 - California - Challenged at the Porterville high schools for "many profane and obscene references, vulgar Spanish words, and glorifies witchcraft and death"
1996 - Texas - Retained on the Round Rock Independent High School Reading list after a challenge that the book was too violent
1999 - California - Removed from the Laton Unified School District for violence and profanity that might harm students after being chosen because the student population is 80 percent Hispanic.
2000 - New York - Challenged at the John Jay High School in Wappingers Falls because the book is "full of sex and cursing"
2005 - Norwood, Colorado, Norwood High School - after the book was removed from reading lists and to be destroyed, the parents asked to burn it - The book was removed by the superintendent after two parents complained about profanity. He gave all copies of the books to the parents who "tossed them in the trash." The superintendent later apologized after students organized an all day sit-in at the school gym.
2008 - Newman, CA, Orestimba High School - removed by the superintendent for being "profane and anti-Catholic." Teachers claimed the superintendent circumvented policy on book challenges and set a dangerous precedent.
2013 - Driggs, ID, Teton Valley School District - Removed and reinstated after being banned by the superintendent for "profanity and alleged inappropriateness"
Part The Big Read
ofSources
Doyle, Robert P. Banned Books: Challenging Our Freedom to Read. 2014.
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"Dances and Dames"
Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0