By Abbi Ross, Aya Hussein and Sarah Siock, Capital News Service
Last month, Carroll Countyโs Board of Education temporarily removedย 56 booksย from the districtโs school libraries after complaints about inappropriate content. An analysis by Capital News Service (CNS) found that a high proportion of the titles being reviewed were written by female, LGBTQIA+ and non-binary authors and featured LGBTQIA+ characters and characters of color.
CNS collected data about the authors and content of the 56 books being challenged from author websites, publisher websites, book synopsis and other online sources.
There are 43 different authors of the 56 books being challenged. The data collected byย CNSย shows a majority, 67%, of the authors are female. Despite only accounting for less than 2% of U.S. adults according toย Pew Research Center survey data, non-binary authors make up 12% of the book authors.

LGBTQIA+ writers and illustrators make up 28%, despite the LGBTQIA+ community representing only about 7% of the U.S. adult population, according to Pew Research Center.
Many of the titles up for review also include diverse characters.
According to the CNS analysis, of the 56 books temporarily removed, at least 25 contain LGBTQIA+ characters and at least 16 include characters of color.
The challenges were driven by Moms for Liberty, a conservative group focusing on parentsโ rights that, according to The Washington Post, has been responsible for a surge of book challenges across the United States in recent years.
Moms for Libertyโs Carroll County Chair, and mother of five, Kit Hart has attended various school board meetings to speak about the issue of having books in school libraries that have what the group deemed โgraphic sexโ content.
โThe only criteria that we used to identify these books was that they contained very graphic sex or rape, that was the only criteria that we use, it wasnโt anything else,โ Hart said.
Hart said there is already a mental health crisis in the U.S. and the group wants to help identify some of the factors which could be contributing.
ย โWe believe that this type of material can be very upsetting and problematic to students, and itโs not developing any kind of literacy that they need, and it can really damage their mental health,โ Hart said.

Moms for Liberty points to the website BookLooks.org when evaluating books. It provides detailed reports of what they consider objectionable content and ratings for specific books. Some of the concerns listed in the reports include โalternate sexualitiesโ and โalternate gender ideologies.โ
BookLooks also lists various types of โcontroversial commentaryโ that they believe children and young adults shouldnโt have access to, including themes about race, culture, politics, religion, abortion and more.
Out of the challenged books, 28% contain LGBTQIA+ themes, and 14% include non-binary themes, according to BookLooks.
A book that discusses both sexuality and gender ideology is โAll Boys Arenโt Blueโ by George M. Johnson, who is a queer Black man. He wrote a series of essays about his โtrials and triumphsโ growing up in New Jersey and Virginia. With 86 challenges, it was the second-most challenged book in the country in 2022, according to the American Library Association (ALA).
Some parents, like Carroll County resident and mom of two Pamela Hohlbein, worry the removal would result in children having limited access to diverse voices and perspectives.
โAt the end of the day, these book bans are affecting kids, who are not really kids anymore. Theyโre teenagers, theyโre young adults. They need to learn about the world, not just this little Carroll County bubble that everyone seems to think is protecting the kids,โ said Hohlbein. โBut when they get off into the real world, and they donโt know about other cultures, and they donโt know how to interact with the LGBTQ community or the BIPOC community, itโs really going to harm them in the long run.โ
Hart said she agrees that students should be exposed to different people, cultures and lifestyles in their reading but does not see why sexual content has to be included in some works.
โJust donโt include that sexual content in the books. โฆ They should be able to be exposed to all different kinds of people without being exposed to sexual content at the same time,โ Hart said.
According to BookLooks, some 96% of the books challenged in Carroll County include forms of sexual content, with 38% discussing sexual assault.
One of these books being flagged for containing sexual assault is โA Stolen Life: A Memoirโ by Jaycee Lee Dugard, who wrote about her experience of abuse and survival after being kidnapped and held in captivity for 18 years.
Wendy Novak, a Carroll County resident and mom of three, said that books written by survivors of sexual assault about their experiences helped her understand what her own child went through, which she also spoke about at the September Board of Education meeting.
โI have a 25-year-old that was sexually assaulted, and for me, and I know itโs true for other people, reading books by survivors helps to understand what my child went through,โ Novak said. โThese books are available in high schools. Theyโre not available in middle or elementary schools, but theyโre available at the age range that is unfortunately very likely to be assaulted.โ
Some members of the Carroll County Public Schoolโs Board of Education have expressed support for the removal of the books.
Carroll County Board of Education members Steve Whisler and Tara Battaglia both signed Moms For Libertyโs โParent Pledge,โ which states that they will โhonor the fundamental rights of parents including but not limited to the right to direct the education, medical care, and moral upbringing of their children.โ
Whisler was also a speaker at Moms for Libertyโsย โGiving Parents a Voice Townhallโย held in Silver Spring on Sept. 26, where he spoke about how much he values parental involvement.
The issue of book challenges exists beyond Carroll County. According to national data collected by the ALAโs Office for Intellectual Freedom, in the first 8 months of 2023, 1,915 unique titles were targeted.
According to the ALA, the number of unique titles challenged has increased by 20% this year from the same reporting period in 2022, which saw the highest number of challenges since the ALA started collecting the data 20 years ago.
The ALA found the recent rise in title challenges is often driven by a single person or group challenging multiple titles at a time.
In the first eight months of 2023, 11 states reported cases of a challenge toโฏ100 or more books, compared to six during the same reporting period in 2022 and zero in 2021, and that โ9 in 10 of the overall number of books challenged were part of an attempt to censor multiple titles,โ according to the ALA.
It doesnโt seem likely the challenges will slow down soon. In nearby Harford County, Board of Education Vice President Melissa Hahn called out six books for being inappropriate for students at a recent board meeting.
In Carroll County, the school districtโs reconsideration committee will continue to review up to five books per month. According to The Baltimore Sun, school officials have decided to retain five of the books in high school libraries, including โThe Perks of Being a Wallflowerโ by Stephen Chbosky, โTiltโ by Ellen Hopkins, โThe Sun and her Flowersโ by Rupi Kaur, โNot that Bad: Dispatches from Rape Cultureโ by Roxane Gay, and โSlaughterhouse Fiveโ by Kurt Vonnegut, though the books have not yet been returned to shelves as the decision is open to appeal. โSlaughterhouse Five,โ an anti-war novel long considered a classic of American literature, has been permanently removed from middle school libraries in the county.
Dylan Manfre contributed to this story
