The debate raging in some Canadian school dioceses over the presence of Philip Pullman’s The Golden Compass on media center shelves has expanded from Canada to the United States, where a public school in Alamosa, Colorado, briefly removed the book in November and a Catholic school in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, is in the process of reconsidering it.
It was Alamosa’s Ortega Middle School librarian Mindy Wandling who pulled the book over concerns about its age-appropriateness in November, after consulting with principal Neil Seneff. Alamosa High School librarian Mark Skinner soon found out about the removal and protested to district Superintendent Henry Herrera, who convened a meeting with school principals and librarians on December 3. Within two days, The Golden Compass was back in the Ortega collection, according to the December 11 Alamosa Valley Courier.
“I have a hard time with anyone who wants to pull a book when they haven’t read it,” Skinner said at a December 10 Adams State College public forum prompted by the incident. Forum panelist Ed Wandling, husband of the Ortega school librarian, explained that Mindy became concerned after her research on Pullman turned up an interview in the Sydney Morning Herald December 13, 2003, in which Pullman—an avowed atheist—said, “My books are about killing God.” Ed Wandling (who said he was representing his wife because she was recovering from the shock of two area shootings December 8 and 9 targeting the New Life Church where the Wandlings are staff members) added that he was not challenging the book’s literary merit but its message because it conflicts with community standards. “The American Library Association thinks I, as a parent, am the only one who can restrict what my children read. I don’t agree with that.” (From AL Direct)
Thursday, December 20, 2007
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