Tuesday, April 10, 2007

3682

Is it safe to let kids read?

We've all heard about librarians who don't want filters to protect children. What about books? Who's watching the publishers? Greg Smith's blog notes that recently he looked through a publisher's catalog at the YA titles and found:

A book on paralysis
A book on death of a parent, alcoholism, and unwanted pregnancy.
A book on death of a parent through cancer
A book on alcoholism
A book on armed assault with a deadly weapon
A book on death of both parents in a car crash
A book on death of both parents in a car crash and an unwanted pregnancy
A book whose catalog copy is vague, but appears to involve at least armed robbery and child abandonment
An historical book on suicide
A contemporary book on suicide
A book on death of a parent and economic hardship
A book on censorship. And sex.
A book on death by accidental shooting (or general stupidity)
A book on child abandonment, alcoholism, and an accident of indeterminate nature (resulting in, possibly, death)
A book on divorce
A book on death of a parent, economic hardship, robbery, and risking death.
Two books on (1960s) sex, drugs, and rock & roll (and therefore, at least metaphorically, death)

I'm glad I read only horse and dog stories when I was a kid (and Laura Ingalls Wilder); a lot of them were sad, but at least they didn't commit suicide or steal.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

wow... you are indeed a closed minded petty person... i feel sad for you. heaven forbid that young adults are given the credit they deserve to understand and work thru difficult life issues.

but... typical christian conservatives, always wanting to bury their heads in the sand and force their views on everyone.

Norma said...

I haven't a clue what you're talking about, you seem to have dropped in from another comment zone. YA is 10-12 in most libraries, not 18-20. And I haven't made a single recommendation or list, the way libraries do (my PL last year had a "holiday" list without a single Christmas title). And heaven forbid, that children deserve something other than the unremitting social work headlines and pain that passes for literature. I'm sure a kid just going through divorce of her parents will be cheered up by reading about some other kid's parent dying in a car crash. Yes, that should really be a comfort.