PEN America is very busy trying to keep abreast of the states banning books. Thanks to reactionary Governor Kim Reynolds, Iowa has taken the lead in banning classics as well as books about sexuality and race.
Earlier this week, the Urbandale, Iowa, school district ordered its educators to remove a list of nearly 400 titles if found in district schools and classrooms. After public pressure including an open letter from PEN America, the district dropped its objections to many of the titles and released a new list of 65 books it identified in its libraries that it said violate state law, according to documents obtained by the Iowa anti-censorship group Annie’s Foundation.
Those books include Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars, Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God, Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, James Joyce’s Ulysses and dozens of others. This is still a jaw-dropping number of titles to be ordered removed from schools, with serious questions about how these titles were chosen and evaluated.
See the list of 65 books from the Urbandale, Iowa, school district.
The original PEN America article:
PEN America has sent an open letter to an Iowa school district calling on district leaders to reverse an order to remove a list of nearly 400 titles if found in district schools and classrooms.
Urbandale Community School District releaseda list of nearly 400 titles deemed to be in potential violation of newly enacted state legislation, Senate File 496. The list includes classics like The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger, Catch-22 by Joseph Heller, and The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison; children’s books like Mayor Pete, an illustrated biography of Pete Buttigieg by Rob Sanders; several YA novels like The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas and Looking for Alaska by John Green; and other texts from authors as celebrated and as far-ranging as James Baldwin, James Joyce, and Albert Camus.
While not every book on the list is necessarily currently available in Urbandale schools, those that are must be removed, and, seemingly, cannot be assigned or purchased.
WHICH BOOKS WERE BANNED FROM SCHOOLS IN URBANDALE, IOWA?
According to a report in the Des Moines Register, nearly 400 books have been identified for removal from Urbandale schools. The list includes:
- Literary classics like The Catcher in the Ryeby J.D. Salinger, Ulysses by James Joyce, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou, As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner,Maus by Art Spiegelman, Are You There God?, It’s Me Margaret by Judy Blume, The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood,Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert, 1984by George Orwell, Brave New World by Aldous Huxley, A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway, and Catch 22 by Joseph Heller.
- Children’s picture books like Mayor Pete, about the U.S. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg, Sharice’s Big Voice, about U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, The Adventures of Honey & Leon, about actor Alan Cumming’s two dogs and books about families likeEverywhere Babies by Susan Meyers, The Family Book by Todd Parr, and Old MacDonald Had A Baby by Emily Snape.

- Contemporary young adult books by award-winning authors such as The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas, I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter by Erika Sánchez, The Sun and Her Flowers by Rupi Kaur, Looking for Alaska, The Fault in Our Stars, and Paper Towns by John Green, Last Night at The Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo, All Boys Aren’t Blue by George Johnson, and Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe.
- Works by renowned authors James Baldwin, Charles Baudelaire, Albert Camus, Nikki Giovanni, Toni Morrison, Henry Miller, Robert Cormier, Neil Gaiman, Roxane Gay, Zora Neale Hurston, Khaled Hosseini, Alice Walker, and Tony Kushner.
WHAT IS IOWA’S SENATE FILE 496?
Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds signed Senate File 496into law in May 2023. The law has numerous provisions, based on a requirement that schools adopt what it calls an “age appropriate, multicultural and gender-fair approach” by schools and school districts.
The law includes:
- A “Don’t Say Gay” provision, modeled on legislation passed in Florida in 2022, that applies to Kindergarten to 6th grade: “A school district shall not provide any program, curriculum, test, survey, questionnaire, promotion, or instruction relating to gender identity or sexual orientation to students in kindergarten through grade six.”
- A directive to include “age appropriate” materials in classrooms and libraries. The law defines “age-appropriate” as “topics, messages, and teaching methods suitable to particular ages or age groups of children and adolescents, based on developing cognitive, emotional, and behavioral capacity typical for the age or age group.” The law also states that “’Age-appropriate’ does not include any material with descriptions or visual depictions of a sex act as defined in section 702.17.” This is a reference to Iowa criminal code, including a definition of sex acts and sexual activity that was not originally written to apply to written or visual materials.
- A mandate for districts to develop policies for parents/guardians to to review all instructional materials, to file objections to challenge these materials, and a public listing of all books in school district libraries
- A prohibition on students from serving on review committees that “determine, or provide recommendations related to, whether a material in a school library should be removed” after it has been challenged. Additionally, parents and guardians who challenge a book or library material are guaranteed confidentiality.
- The potential for disciplinary action against educators found in violation of its provisions, particularly concerning “age appropriate” materials in school libraries, including the possibility of losing their licenses.
WHY WERE BOOKS BANNED FROM SCHOOLS IN URBANDALE, IOWA?
In the absence of state guidance on how to implement the new law, the Urbandale Community School has taken what it calls thebroadest possible interpretation of the law, in order to protect educators from disciplinary action. But in doing so, they have threatened the freedom to read for the district’s 4,000+ students.
Per the district’s statement, the list of books was curated from “a review of quarantined books from other states who had passed similar laws.” The district noted that the list is not “all-inclusive” nor represents books available in the district’s schools and classrooms.
One senior at Urbandale High Schooldescribed to a local NBC affiliate that the bans would impact her ability to complete her coursework. “I’m involved in a lot of AP and college-level courses and so for me, I was in AP Lit[erature] last year and so I read some amazing books…going forward [I’m] taking Advanced Comp[osition] this year. And so I won’t be able to study 1984 or The Color Purple and a lot of those books that are so important and so critical for those curriculums.”
The list, and the law that prompted it, comes amid a national wave of book bans andeducational gag orders that limit what can be said in the classroom, especially about race and LGBTQ+ topics.
WHAT CAN BE DONE?
PEN America invites the public to send its letter to school district officials, calling on them to reverse the policy, and to retain all reading materials so students can begin the school year with full access to literature in their classrooms.
The letter is also intended to signal to other school districts, parents, educators, librarians, and students that the government overreach stemming from Gov. Reynolds’ legislation is an affront to students’ bedrock rights.

Any student turning to ULYSSES for titillation, when there’s a whole internet full of erotica and porn right at their fingertips, should be richly rewarded.
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I wonder why Iowa banned “1984” and “Brave New World”? No sex or race or LGBT content in either.
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There’s definitely sex in 1984. I learned that when I was 12.
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Dienne: IKR?
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IKR???
Help me figure that one out.
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I know, right?
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I am beginning to think that school districts are trying to see if they can come up with the largest number of books to be banned regardless of the negative impacts it has on the students to which these districts are supposed to be providing a good education. I wonder if there is going to be an award or trophy for the winner.
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Or maybe they are doing this to highlight the absurdity of the law?
Personally, I wouldn’t trust the adminimals to think that radically.
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The school board probably thought James Joyce’s Ulysses was about the Union General Ulysses Grant.
And as everyone knows, like Lincoln and the rest of the Union, Grant was a Wokee.
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I see that the naked mice in Maus made the list of books banned by the Bowdlerizing Urbandale Twits against Titillation, or BUTTs.
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Iowa’s language looks much like Florida’s. Here’s Iowa:
“A school district shall not provide any program, curriculum, test, survey, questionnaire, promotion, or instruction relating to gender identity or sexual orientation to students in kindergarten through grade six.”
Questions:
Is male a gender identity? Is female?
Answer:
Yes
How is a teacher supposed to deal with that?
The new thing in Florida is that parents must complete a form if their student (FLDOe’s language) wants to use any name other than the first name on their birth certificate.
Parents are busily completing forms to say that it’s ok to call Charles “Charlie” or Carol Sue “Sue” as well as to call Mike “Missy,” which was apparently the intent of this overreach by the lapdog legislature and the FLDOe. (The small e reflects its emphasis on education.)
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The small e reflects its emphasis on education.
lol
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Whoever made that list needs to read more. Aside from the obvious learning involved they might improve their spelling skills and correct the listing for “A Seperate [sic] Peace.”
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I was reminded that “1984” and “Brave New World” do have sex scenes. I forgot. Obviously they made no impression on my high school or college brain. I remembered the tyranny and mind control. Maybe that’s what scared the censors.
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Whoever made that list needs to read more.
Seriously. If they are going to remove books that simply suggest that sex occurred (e.g., Madame Bovary), then they need to remove just about every novel ever written. Here it is, the really juicy stuff from Madame Bovary. Think you can handle it?
In my soul you are like a madonna on a pedestal, in a high place, secure and immaculate. But I need you to stay alive. I need your eyes, your voice, your thoughts. Be my friend, my sister, my angel!
And he reached out his arm and put it around her waist. Gently she tried to free herself. He held her like this, as they walked.
But they heard the two horses cropping the leaves.
— Oh! Not yet, said Rodolphe. We’re not going yet! Stay!
He guided her further along, around a little pool, where the duckweed lay green on the surface. Rotting water lilies floated, stuck among the reeds. At the sound of their steps in the grass, frogs sprang away into hiding.
— I mustn’t. I mustn’t, she kept saying. I’m mad to listen to you.
— Why?… Emma! Emma!
— Oh! Rodolphe! . . Slowly the woman spoke his name, leaning on his shoulder.
The woollen stuff of her dress caught on the velvet of his jacket, she stretched back her white neck, swelling with a sigh, and, swooning, blind with tears, with a deep shudder as she hid her face, she yielded.
Oh, Gustave, you endangerer of morals!
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“with a deep shudder as she hid her face, she yielded”
That was just about as racy as it got at the time! lol. Evidently, that’s too much for the repressed persons of Urbandale! lol
Oh dear! The smelling salts!!!!
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My point in quoting this is that this is as titillating as it gets in MB. Clearly, the morons of Urbandale are banning books they haven’t read.
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I’m beginning to think a Banned Book Store might be a good business opportunity…
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The MoveOn organization has been sponsoring banned bookmobiles that have gone to sites in FL and other states and given away free copies of some of the “banned books.”
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Fascists running RED states are marching (goose stepping Heil-Hitler style) as if they’ve already won the country and control every governor’s mansion, state legislature, a majority in both Houses of Congress, and the White Houses.
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I am at a loss for words.
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I am at words for loss, which is a step before that.
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I thought of some words today, but I can only tell you what letters they start with.
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I have been preparing The Collected Letters of Bob Shepherd. Here, a taste:
a, b, c, d, e, f
Reserve your copy today!
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So funny that Madame Bovary is on this list. Why? Well, Flaubert was onto these people. Here, from MB:
The Bible is just the same; there are… you know… some rather juicy… details, things… really… tasty.
And, seeing Monsieur Bournisien’s gesture of irritation:
You would agree that it isn’t a book to put into the hands of any young person, and I should be vexed if Athalie [his own daughter]…
— But it’s the Protestants, and not us, shouted the other impatiently, who recommend the Bible! [Until the 20th century the Bible which was in Latin was not meant to be read by common Catholics.] — No matter! said Homais, I’m surprised, in this day and age, in this enlightened century, that anyone still persists in denouncing an intellectual relaxation which is inoffensive, morally sound and sometimes even hygienic, not so, doctor?
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I can’t imagine these dolts reading “Madame Bovary.”
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IKR? such a magnificent book
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Some advice to Americans from L
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from Lady Chatterley’s Lover:
“I believe especially in being warm-hearted in love, in fucking with a warm heart. I believe if men could fuck with warm hearts, and the women take it warm-heartedly, everything would come right. It’s all this cold-hearted fucking that is death and idiocy.”
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Hmmm. The last post did not show up. WordPress has gone all Urbandale on me. LOL.
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This morning, when I read Diane’s post about this benighted school district, I was so incensed that I posted, here, a passage from Lawrence’s Lady Chatterley’s Lover in the unexpurgated version published in 1960 (the one that uses the F and C words liberally). My post was directed at the Puritans of Urbandale. Fortunately, I think, Diane’s wiser head prevailed and, when my comment went into moderation, she chose not to approve it. Thanks, Diane! Seriously.
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