Saturday, September 24, 2016

Banned Books Week

Image result for banned books week


It is that time of year again! The American Library Association's Banned Books Week runs this week from Sunday, September 25th to Saturday, October 1st 2016. I have squeed out over this bookish of all bookish holidays in the past.

But since it is the first time I am writing about it for The Cardigan Catalog, I will review briefly. Banned Books Week is one week every year that the ALA uses to promote Intellectual Freedom by publicizing a Top Ten List of most frequently challenged books for the prior year.

A challenge is described by the ALA as follows.

"Challenges are documented requests to remove materials from schools or libraries, thus restricting access to them by others. In some cases OIF may get numerous details about who challenged a book, why they are complaining about the book, what happened during the challenge, and the current status of the book. In other cases, few details are supplied beyond the fact of the challenge and the reasons for the challenge."

So, basically, the mission of Banned Books Week is to bring awareness of books on which attempts have been made to limit their availability to a population. Most challenges are made in school libraries, but a fair amount are still made in public libraries.

To wit, my response to those challenges is...


So, you bet your booky buttocks I'm gonna promote the hell outta some Banned Books! Here are:

ALA's TOP TEN MOST CHALLENGED BOOKS OF 2015

  1. Looking for Alaska, by John Green         Reasons:Offensive language, sexually explicit, and unsuited for age group.
  2. Fifty Shades of Grey, by E. L. James     Reasons:Sexually explicit, unsuited to age group, and other (“poorly written,” “concerns that a group of teenagers will want to try it”)
  3. I Am Jazz, by Jessica Herthel and Jazz Jennings       Reasons:Inaccurate, homosexuality, sex education, religious viewpoint, and unsuited for age group
  4. Beyond Magenta: Transgender Teens Speak Out, by Susan Kuklin   Reasons:Anti-family, offensive language, homosexuality, sex education, political viewpoint, religious viewpoint, unsuited for age group, and other (“wants to remove from collection to ward off complaints”)
  5. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, by Mark Haddon   Reasons:Offensive language, religious viewpoint, unsuited for age group, and other (“profanity and atheism”)
  6. The Holy Bible   Reasons:Religious viewpoint
  7. Fun Home, by Alison Bechdel   Reasons:Violence and other (“graphic images”)
  8. Habibi, by Craig Thompson   Reasons: Nudity, sexually explicit, and unsuited for age group
  9. Nasreen’s Secret School: A True Story from Afghanistan, by Jeanette Winter   Reasons: Religious viewpoint, unsuited to age group, and violence
  10. Two Boys Kissing, by David Levithan   Reasons:Homosexuality and other (“condones public displays of affection”

My take away on Banned Books Week has always been the same as my thoughts on the V Chip. (Yes, I am that frickin old!)



If you are an adult and you object to a book or TV program or video game, then don't read/watch/play that thing! If you are a parent, and you don't want your child to read/watch/play the thing, then talk to your child about not reading/watching/playing the thing. If you are a child, and you are being required to read something that you object to for school, discuss it with your parents or teacher. Perhaps they can work out a substitute.

Don't try to spoil things for the rest of the world by attempting to restrict what content is available! You might not like Hot Chocolate, but that doesn't mean the rest of shouldn't get any.


To those of you unopposed to the notions of Intellectual Freedom and soul warming beverages I say:

Hot Chocolate and Banned Books for everyone!

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Reading Widely for the Scare


As I mentioned in my last post, now is the time of year when I get my freak on, booky style. I consume all things horror. The Good, The Bad, and the Really Really Really Bad. I have in years past, stuck to my staples; Clive Barker, Stephen King, Bram Stoker. All are fantastic wordsmiths of horror! All are old white dudes.

I occasionally dabble in Paranormal Romance, with a re-reading of Frankenstein thrown in, but I run into the same problem. Mary Shelley, Patricia Briggs, and J.R. Ward are all fantastic writers, but they are all white women. And there is nothing wrong with that! I myself am an older Millenial white librarian. I can relate to those stories. They're like comfort food. Hot chocolate for my soul. 

That is not to say that a white writer cannot write a non-white character, and do it well. Perish the thought! I love Patricia Briggs's Mercy Thompson. She's like Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Harry Dresden had a half-Native American coyote shifter love child!

But I realized that there is a whole world of horror and paranormal fiction out there, that my fingers don't readily dance to on the bookshelf (That's literal BTW. I'm weird that way). I realized this year that I need to expand my repertoire. 

It all started with Shadowshaper by Daniel Jose Older.


You guys, Sierra Santiago is ALL THE THINGS! She's a strong, flawed, vulnerable, black latina painter from Brooklyn, who finds strength within herself to embrace a destiny, that is concealed from her by EVERYONE SHE HAS EVER MET! 

Yes, I was shouty with the run-on sentence. But feels!

This is not exactly horror, more paranormal mystery. But there are zombies! The full-on Haitian Voodoo kind, not the viral outbreak kind. There are also ghosts, spectral possessions, and the greatest terror of all, malevolent cultural appropriation! Way to get political with your villain Mr. Older! I tip my hat.

I found Shadowshaper on a YA booklist from Book Riot written by Kelly Jensen. She's one of my favorite book reviewers. So I gave it a shot. If you enjoy paranormal themes, well written characters, and language put to the page like a painting, you should give it a shot too.

After reading Shadowshaper, I really got into the idea of reading horror from perspectives that differ from my own; reading more widely, in other words. The simplest thing I could think of was to start with writers of different backgrounds and races from my own. Turned out to not be so simple. According to my research, only something like 11% of novels published in the US each year are written by people of color. Break that down into genre fiction, and the number gets smaller.

There is, of course Octavia Butler, who was and is a goddess in the field of horror. (She passed away in 2006) But I couldn't think of anyone else! So I started researching 'horror writers of color' and found these lists.



My first port of call was Nalo Hopkinson's Sister Mine.


Hopkinson's Makeda is now one of my favorite protagonists ever! She spends her whole life in the shadow of her twin sister Abby. This is challenging, because her family is peopled with gods, and she's the only one without magic. Makeda struggles to pull away from her sister's influence, and create a genuine human life for herself.

The 'haint' that follows Makeda is one of the most layered monsters I've ever read about. It's grotesque and tortured and heavily tragic. There are so many shades of Frankenstein going on in this story! The narrative is like hot chocolate with a hint of chili pepper. Yum!

My scary reading season will still feature old standards. I re-read CabalCarrie, and Dracula almost every year. But this year I'm going to throw in some different perspectives. Here's my TBR POC Writers Reading List.



Ring by Koji Suzuki- I admit, I saw the movie first. But I have read the first chapter of Ring, and I am hooked already.



Fledgling by Octavia Butler- A vampire story by the aforementioned goddess of horror.


Voodoo Dreams: A Novel of Marie Laveau- I'm not gonna lie. After Shadowshaper, I now have a thirst for Voodoo zombies in my horror reading. This got 3.8 stars on Goodreads, so I'm willing to give it a shot.


Salsa Nocturna: Stories by Daniel José Older- I'm a big fan of anthologies and Mr. Older already has me hooked. I'm looking forward to getting this hold in from the library.


The Last Final Girl by Stephen Graham Jones- I can't get enough of meta-horror. The description of this book references Cabin in the Woods and Tarantino. What's not to love?

And maybe just one more to round out the year...


Loups-Garous by Natsuhiko Kyogoku- I'm all about werewolves right now. I blame Patricia Briggs, Sarah McCarty, and Teen Wolf for bringing back this obsession. I'm really hoping that there are actual werewolves in this story, and that it scares the pants off me! If the cover is any indication, I won't be disappointed.


Side Note:If you're into werewolves, I highly recommend a little known millenium era TV series called Wolf Lake. Pre-Vampire Diaries Paul Wesley as a teenage alpha-male werewolf, and Sherman Blackstone are everything!

Tuesday, September 20, 2016

New Book Blog. Yay!


I've been writing my personal library programming blog for a while. But I can't say everything I need to say about my obsessive love for books on a blog for children's librarianship. So I figured I'd start a new blog devoted to books, bookishness, and all around literary geeking out.

I named this blog The Cardigan Catalog, because next to a book, a cardigan is a librarian's best friend. We work with the public, and temperatures in the library fluctuate with season and body count. So removable clothing layers are a must. As for the catalog bit, if you don't know what a Card Catalog is, I encourage you to do your due diligence and look it up.

Go ahead. Google! Be free! I'll wait.

You got it? Cool. Then, I'll assume you get the funny, and I'll proceed.

It is now September, which mean two things to my reading life. Halloween is coming ...


and so is NaNoWriMo. 


I confess I am writing a novel. And it's hard y'all! But I won't bore you with the details of that, except to say that my reading list currently consists of style manuals, paranormal romance, celtic mythology, and lots and lots of horror. You do the math.



Mr. King aside. Here are my current reading pics.


The Transitive Vampire by Karen Elizabeth Gordon.

A horror comedy grammar book, you say? Pre-Twilight, Post-Gothic vampire references you say? I'm all in! 


Sanctum by Madeleine Roux.

I listened to the first book in Roux's Asylum series while playing the PC version of The Room on Steam. Very apropos. Very creepy. And I very much am going to listen to this second book while playing The Room Two.


And just for a shot of full-on terror, I'm re-reading My Best Friend's Exorcism: A Novel by Grady Hendrix.

Come for the 80's cheese. Stay for mindbending terror and trauma, that will have you refusing any food product any friend offers you - ever!