• Sat, Sep 24 2011

12 Great YA Books to Read to Your Favorite Kid During Banned Books Week

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  • Lindsay Cross

    I absolutely love this list and that you’re celebrating Banned Books Week! My toddler and I will definitely be reading some Shel this weekend.

  • Peppercorn

    I read the Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark books in the 4th grade. The stories themselves never scared me; indeed, I found many of them to be quite tame and even amusing. However, their terrifying illustrations still ook me out, almost a decade later. I’m pretty sure those drawings are the reason I have to check behind the shower curtain or in the closet or under the bed sometimes- I just know that a freakish, distorted, ink-splattered scarecrow of death with no head and a pack of evil corpse-hounds or something is going to get me.

  • Amanda

    Rich handsome men can fall in love with fat ugly women. It probably doesn’t happen often, however. We live in a society that places a great deal of emphasis on looks. Society tells us we should scorn and reject anyone who doesn’t fit a certain standard. So it takes very brave men and women to be able to look beyond a person’s exterior and get involved in a relationship with someone that the rest of society considers beneath them.On sugarbabymeet.c0m,you could found that everything is possible.Everyone can own love, It’s possible for a man to like a woman for who she is rather than for how she looks.

  • Lauren

    Wow, every single one of those books I have read and LOVED. I only knew of 3 of them being banned, though. The Perks of Being a Wallflower was banned from independent reading when I was in high school because some idiot decided to decorate a cake about The Virgin Suicides and then any book that had to do with suicide was banned.

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