Utah adds Looking for Alaska as 28th banned book in public schools

Utah has added *Looking for Alaska* by John Green to its statewide list of banned books in public schools, making it the 28th prohibited title and the ninth ban this year. The addition follows the March 2 bans of four other books that brought the total to 27, as covered in prior reporting.

The statewide ban on Looking for Alaska (2005) by John Green was recorded after the March 2, 2026, additions of Breathless by Jennifer Niven, The Carnival at Bray by Jessie Ann Foley, The Handmaid’s Tale: The Graphic Novel by Margaret Atwood (illustrated by Renee Nault), and Red Hood by Elana K. Arnold, which raised the total to 27 (Utah bans four more books from public schools statewide). This may reflect a reporting delay or clerical error, with a possible ban date of March 12 instead of March 2.

Utah's House Bill 29 (effective July 2024) requires statewide removal of books deemed 'objective sensitive material' or 'pornographic' if challenged in multiple districts. Since January 2026, nine books have been added. Of the 28 banned titles, 21 are by women authors (average publication 2010), driven by nine districts—Davis leading with 27 challenges, followed by Washington with 26.

A lawsuit challenging HB 29 continues, backed by the Maya Angelou estate, but bans proceed. Utah's list exceeds South Carolina's (21 titles). See the Utah public school book bans series for full coverage.

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Utah has added four books to its statewide ban list for public schools, increasing the total to 27 prohibited titles. The new additions include works by Jennifer Niven, Jessie Ann Foley, Margaret Atwood, and Elana K. Arnold. This follows the implementation of House Bill 29, which mandates removals based on challenges in multiple districts.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

A Book Riot article spotlights three new 2026 releases addressing book banning and the right to read. The selections span academic analysis, graphic nonfiction, and fiction, offering varied perspectives on censorship in America. They aim to provide hope amid ongoing challenges.

Hosts Rebecca and Jeff on the Zero to Well-Read podcast discuss Judy Blume's 1975 novel Forever..., one of America's most consistently banned books for its frank portrayal of teenage sexuality. The episode covers its radical impact, ongoing bans, and enduring relevance. A companion newsletter highlights related media, trivia, and reader letters.

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Publishers release a diverse array of young adult novels on March 4, 2026, spanning genres from Norse mythology to family dramas. The lineup includes stories of personal discovery, supernatural threats, and social issues, with some titles available in both hardcover and paperback formats. This marks a busy start to the month's publishing schedule after a slower beginning to the year.

The staff at Explore Booksellers in Aspen have recommended three titles focusing on themes of life, death, and community living. These selections include a new exploration of rivers' legal rights, a memoir of near-death experiences, and a classic novel about London's houseboat dwellers. The recommendations appear in The Colorado Sun's SunLit literature section.

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Luanne James, director of the Rutherford County Library System in Tennessee, has declared she will not comply with a board decision to move over 100 LGBTQ+ children's books to the adult section. In a letter to the board, she cited First Amendment protections and her ethical duties as a librarian. The board, led by chair Cody York, calls her stance insubordination amid ongoing tensions over book access.

 

 

 

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