Christmas is a time for enchanting tales and cozy moments by the fire. Our Christmas books offer an escape into the world of yuletide wonder. With vivid imagery and engaging storytelling, these books transport you to snowy landscapes, twinkling lights, and heartwarming gatherings that capture the essence of the season. Dive into classic Christmas stories and meet penguins, reindeer, and Santa Claus on their festive adventures.

Yes, we have books by many contemporary authors who have contributed to the genre. Books like "The Polar Express" by Chris Van Allsburg, "Meet me under mistletoe" by Jenny Bayliss, and "A Christmas Memory" by Richard Paul Evans offer fresh perspectives on the holiday and have become beloved modern classics.


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Democrats criticized the hearing as leaning into culture war topics to attack public education, and said that those tactics resulted in book bans. Republicans argued that books were not being banned because those that are removed at public schools can be bought elsewhere.

In the last few years, there has been an unprecedented wave of book bans and censorship spurred by parents and right-wing groups to target books that center on the LGBTQ+ community, Black history and diverse stories.

Target is removing Shane Dawson's books from its assortment, the company confirmed to Insider on Monday. The YouTuber published two collections of essays, titled "I Hate Myselfie: A Collection of Essays by Shane Dawson" and "It Gets Worse: A Collection of Essays."

The news that the retail giant would no longer carry Dawson's books was first reported by the YouTuber Sanders Kennedy. Target told Insider it would no longer carry Dawson's books, providing the following statement:

However, we would appreciate it if you, Ex Libris, could intensify the contact with the vendor, so that the target "KNOWLEDGE_UNLATCHED_ROUND_3" will be created in the SFX KB soon, as according to the vendor, the conversation between the two of you was very limited so far.

In the attachment I send you a list with Open Access eBook titles of the Publisher Cambridge University Press, which should therefore have an appropriate target attached to them. May I kindly ask you to create a target named CAMBRIDGEUNIVERSITYPRESSOPENACCESS_BOOKS an attach it to the titles in the attachment?

Already this year, officials have pulled books off shelves, or considered doing so, at public schools and libraries in New Jersey towns like Glen Ridge, Sparta, Bernards Township, and Washington Township.

The group, which advocates for the First Amendment and against book bans, listed 1,477 instances of individual books banned involving 874 unique titles from July to December 2022. In the past two years alone, the group tallied more than 4,000 book-banning instances.

Last year, several GOP legislators in New Jersey introduced a bill that would require public schools to post a comprehensive list online of all books and materials available in their libraries and another bill that would require public schools to make textbooks and other materials used to implement curriculum plans available for inspection by parents and guardians.

For two years PEN America has tracked the growth of this movement, documented in the proliferation of groups advocating for book bans, the spread of mass challenges to long lists of books, the revision of local school district policies and procedures, and the enactment of new legislation and state-level policies. These efforts have led to an escalation in book bans in public schools across states.

This data snapshot reports bans where the initiating action for the ban occurred between July 1 and December 31, 2022. We track instances of books bans at the district-level, meaning one case of a ban is when a book title is removed from access within a school district. PEN America records book bans through publicly available data on district or school websites, news sources, Public Records Requests, and school board minutes.

School book bans take varied forms, and can include prohibitions on books in libraries or classrooms, as well as a range of other restrictions, some of which may be temporary. Book removals that follow established processes may still improperly target books on the basis of content pertaining to race, gender, or sexual orientation, invoking concerns of equal protection in education. For more details, please see the first edition of Banned in the USA (April 2022).

Note: categories less than 10% are not reported; categories are developed based on researcher assessment of banned books, categories are matched to individual titles using publisher summaries, Amazon Books and Goodreads, and expert opinions of librarians and authors.  These categories are often overlapping; several content areas intersect in most books. Together, the content of banned books illuminates how the movement to censor books affects a diverse and varied set of identities, topics, concepts, and stories. 

So far this school year, 11 of the 874 unique titles were banned in ten or more school districts. This list of the most frequently banned books includes a cross section of the content areas presented above, and indicates how efforts to remove books continue to target authors of color and LGBTQ+ authors, as well as books that center LGBTQ+ characters and characters of color.

Each of these titles have been banned in at least 10 or more districts this school year. Among the top eleven books, ten of eleven authors and illustrators are women or non-binary individuals. Four of the books are written by authors of color and four by LGBTQ+ individuals, identities historically underrepresented in publishing and in school libraries.

The graphs below includes the 11 most frequently banned books by the number of school districts to ban the title during the 2021-2022 school year and the number of districts to ban the same title so far in the 2022-23 school year to show how these books are continuously targeted.

The majority of these titles were banned in more districts in 2022-23 than 2021-22. New books can also become sudden targets. For example, Push by Sapphire, a novel that narrates the life of a Black teenage parent who was raped by her father, and Milk and Honey by Rupi Kaur, a poetry collection touching on themes of violence, abuse, love, loss, and femininity, were seldom challenged last school year, but have been removed in at least 10 school districts in just the first half of this school year.

Books banned during the first half of the school year represent a range of titles for intended audiences, with most bans affecting Young Adult (YA) Books. YA books are understood as texts that help students gain knowledge about the contemporary world, their own sense of identity, and social responsibility, and serve as a tool for developing empathy. An overview of the types of books banned so far this school year is below:

Examining the intended readers of books and the kinds of stories most often banned also offers insight into the impact of these book bans on students of all ages. For example, of the 35 picture book titles banned between July and December 2022, 74% (n=26) are stories that feature LGBTQ characters and 46% (n=16) feature characters of color or discuss race and racism. Stories about diverse identities have only recently been added to library shelves; in this moment of escalating book bans, they are some of the prime targets for removal.

Between July and December 2022, instances of individual book bans occurred in 66 school districts in 21 states. PEN America recorded 13 districts in Florida banning books, followed by 12 districts in Missouri, 7 districts in Texas, and 5 districts in both South Carolina and Michigan. Texas districts had the most instances of book bans with 438 bans, followed by 357 bans in Florida, 315 bans in Missouri, and over 100 bans in both Utah and South Carolina.

In Florida, for example, a trio of laws enacted this school year bar instruction on sexual orientation or gender identity in kindergarten through third grade (HB 1557), prohibit educators from discussing advantages or disadvantages based on race (HB 7), and mandate that schools must catalog every book on their shelves, including those found in classroom libraries (HB 1467). Due to the lack of clear guidance, these three laws have each led teachers, media specialists, and school administrators to proactively remove books from shelves, in the absence of any specific challenges. In October 2022, the Florida Board of Education also passed new rules that go beyond the language in the laws, to stipulate that teachers found in violation of these bills could have their professional teaching certification revoked. ff782bc1db

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