Libraries, Schools Join In - School Library Journal
Log In to your Account                Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to SLJ Magazine


ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in a few seconds.

Articles

New Hampshire Parent Challenges 'The Hunger Games'

E-Mail This Link


Enter recipient's e-mail:


Close
Email
RSS |

By Lauren Barack
October 19, 2010

A New Hampshire parent has asked the Goffstown School Board to remove Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games (Scholastic, 2008) from her daughter's class, claiming that it gave her 11-year-old nightmares and could numb other students to the effects of violence.

HungergamesCover(Original Import)Although Tracy LaSalle has yet to read the bestseller herself, on September 20 she requested the removal of the book from her daughter's seventh-grade class at Mountain View Middle School due to its violent subject matter. The book is being read aloud during a reading period for those who choose not to take a foreign language class.

The first novel of a trilogy, The Hunger Games involves teens who are forced by a postapocalyptic "Big Brother"-like government to fight a televised battle to the death.

"Mrs. LaSalle stated the main character is the only one of twenty-four children that survives in the book, that children are being killed for entertainment, pitted one against the other in a game," read Goffstown school board minutes from September 20. "Mrs. LaSalle asked what this book teaches students as far as honor, ethics, and morals. Mrs. LaSalle stated there is no lesson in this book except if you are a teenager and kill twenty-three other teenagers, you win the game and your family wins."

Philip Pancoast, a Goffstown school board member and parent who did read the book, is questioning LaSalle's push to have the title removed.

"It's your standard variety YA-fare," says Pancoast, a parent with a junior at Goffstown High School. "A fair reading of Old Yeller (HarperCollins, 1956) would likely cause a child to have nightmares of the death of the dog."

To censorship expert Pat Scales, the main concern is one parent attempting to set policy for the children of others. And this challenge, which comes on the heels of the American Library Association's (ALA) Banned Book Week, is a cautionary tale other parents should note, she adds.

"When a parent objects to a book being taught, a lot of school districts say a parent can take a child out," says Scales, a former school librarian and member of ALA's Intellectual Freedom Committee. "And a lot of parents have an objection because they say their child is being singled out. But you have already singled your child out. And no parent has a right to select the curriculum."

Pancoast says the Goffstown School Board forwarded LaSalle's request to Superintendent Stacey Buckley, who already has gathered a committee to review the book, according to the Goffstown News. Principal Jim Hunt, school librarian Clare Yerbur, and teachers will be a part of that group, which has 30 days to issue their findings.

Although the school district requests that formal book challenges be handled by filling out a request for reconsideration form, LaSalle has yet to do so. To date, The Hunger Games is still being read in class, and LaSalle's daughter is removed from class during that time. Three copies of the book remain in the school library.

School Board Chair Keith Allard and Superintendent Buckley did not return any phone calls or emails.

Still, Scales worries about how parents deal with what they feel is objectionable material at school and suggests supporting students rather than seeking to censor.

"I think parents should always have an open door," says Scales. "And a teacher should be open with a parent, and perhaps invite [the parent] to read along with them in class. But if you have one parent trying to dictate policy for all children, maybe all these other parents should speak up."

This article originally appeared in the newsletter Extra Helping. Go here to subscribe.

E-Mail This Link


Enter recipient's e-mail:


Close
Email
RSS |




Reader Comments (52)


How can you object to a book you have not even read? Parents like that give a bad name to parenthood. Who DOESN'T want their child to learn/think/explore/expand?? Unfortunately, way too many.



Posted by Mary Roman on October 19, 2010 12:57:39PM

Well..this parent's objection to the novel might have a bit more substance if she had actually read the it. The main character, Katniss Everdeen IS NOT the only teen to survive the Hunger Games. Peeta survives as well. The themes in The Hunger Games are thought provoking and motivating to YA readers. I cannot imagine a world where all things of this nature would be removed so that young people could not be exposed to them. I am an educator of middle school age students but I am also a parent of a teenager. I have also read the entire trilogy. I would use these books in my classroom as well as encourage my daughter to read them.



Posted by Sherry on October 19, 2010 03:13:03PM

As anyone who has read the book can tell you, the lesson goes a lot deeper than "if you are a teenager and kill twenty-three other teenagers, you win the game and your family wins." The Hunger Games is a story about the kind of impossible choices people are asked to make when government is corrupt and unjust. And, as Mrs. LaSalle would know if she had read the book, not only does the main character very seldom kill others, but two out of the 24 teenagers survive, but survival is not really a "win" by any stretch of the imagination



Posted by Sarah Loch on October 19, 2010 03:55:28PM

I just wonder why this is a book being read to an 11 year old child. The book is clearly Young Adult and surely more suitable for a child 13 years and up? Sometimes we get defensive for the wrong reasons and common sense gets thrown out the door. As a young adult librarian I would ask why this particular text was chosen to be read aloud to this particular age group when there are many other good texts that could have been used that would not have caused any angst? Surely as teachers and librarians we also have to be aware of our responsibilites to give children good guidelines as to what they should be reading? If we use good guidelines this sort of thing may not occur, and if it does, at least we would know that the book chosen was chosen for the right reasons, age, etc.... If we don't want books on banned lists some of the care is on our shoulders!



Posted by Hilary Bishop on October 19, 2010 04:32:57PM

Previous | Next

Comments that include profanity, personal attacks, or antisocial behavior such as "spamming", "trolling", or any other inappropriate material will be removed from the site. We will take steps to block users who violate any of our terms of use. You are fully responsible for the content you post. All comments must comply with the Terms and Conditions of this site and by submitting comments you confirm your agreement to these Terms and Conditions.

Your name: *

Your email address: * (We won't publish this.)



* = Required information

 
Advertisement

SLJ Reviews Database

SLJ Reviews Center

Latest Stories


From the Blogs


Advertisements




Connect with SLJ


Follow on Twitter






About Us | Advertising Information | Submissions | Site Map | Contact Us | For Reviewers | RSS | Subscriptions
©2011 Media Source, Inc., All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc.