

Students are forming banned-book clubs and distribution drives to contest restrictions.

By Brooke Park
Reporting Fellow
The Texas Tribune
For high school senior Gabrielle Izu, Texasโ public school book bans feel personal.
The books Texas is targeting โ mainly novels that focus on discussions of race, sexual orientation and gender identity โ tell the tale of Izuโs past and future. The 17-year-old high school student is Asian American, Black and Hispanic and bisexual, and she hates to see her identities or her peersโ censored.
โI ignored [my sexuality] for a really long time. And I think that as a young girl, if a book showed me that this is a life that could be lived, I could have had a lot more peace and coming to terms with bisexuality,โ said Izu, who attends James E. Taylor High School in the Katy Independent School District near Houston.
Here and there, Texas students are forming their own book clubs to read what adults want banned. Books like Margaret Atwoodโs โThe Handmaidโs Tale,โ Ashley Hope Perezโs โOut of Darknessโ and Carmen Maria Machadoโs โIn the Dream House.โ Books that, until last fall, were easy to find and access.
In Katy ISD, students have distributed hundreds of novels challenged by adults in Texas. Theyโre getting the books free of charge from a political advocacy organization and publishers. And in Leander ISD near Austin, students are coming together in a banned-book club to discuss those books. Some students are starting to attend school board meetings to fight for the freedom to choose what to read.
More than a hundred Katy ISD students of a variety of ages, races and gender identities met after school to discuss the bans and pick up contested novels. Among the books theyโre reading is Kalynn Bayronโs โCinderella is Dead,โ a novel that follows a queer, Black teenagerโs coming-of-age story. Izu, who saw herself reflected in the book, said her heart broke when Texas schools targeted it for a ban.
โIt felt like my identity was seen as dangerous because of the banning of a story like that. What about my story? Am I seen as a bad influence?โ Izu said. โAm I seen as something that should be shamed?โ
Texas parents and politicians say they are protecting students with book bans. Many students, including Cameron Samuels, a senior at Seven Lakes High School in Katy ISD, arenโt buying it.

โItโs clear that these books address issues of race and LGBTQ identities, and that is the exact reason that certain people are seeking to remove these books from libraries and prohibit students from accessing them,โ said Samuels, who helped with distribution efforts. โAnd these policies have dire consequences for us because they keep us struggling with our queer identities.โ
Katy ISD students showed strong support at the events, Samuels said. But not all parents are happy, and some have even tried to enter the school to disturb student discussions on Texasโ book bans, they said.
โAs far as I have seen, parents have been the center focus of the movement to ban books and remove them from libraries, where students have been at the forefront of advocating for having access to these books,โ Samuels said.
Books on race are also targeted, especially after Texas lawmakers passed a social studies law to target what they referred to as critical race theory, though the law does not specifically mention it. Critical race theory is a university-level discipline that considers how racism is embedded in policies and systems. The new law states that a teacher โmay not be compelled to discuss a widely debated and currently controversial issue of public policy or social affairsโ in public schools. While this law primarily applies to social studies curriculum, some are also trying to apply it to any book found in a school library.
Katy ISD removed, temporarily, Jerry Craftโs โNew Kid,โ which explores how more subtle or indirect discrimination impacts Black students in a mostly white school. The school district took the action after a parents claimed the book presented harmful content about critical race theory.
The district returned โNew Kidโ to shelves last semester, but Samuels said only students in fifth grade and up are permitted to check it out.
Samuels, who is nonbinary, said the novel comforted them, as they have often felt isolated as one of the few students at their school who use they/them pronouns.
โI have often felt alone and have experienced microaggressions,โ Samuels said. โThereโs no reason that addressing these issues should be something that students are prevented from doing or prohibited from learning about.โ
Katy ISD does not allow students to distribute books the district banned. Samuels said it feels condescending that those in power decide what students can and cannot read.
โAs students, we must take ownership of our education and not let others decide for us which resources we can access and which topics we can learn about,โ they said.
At a recent Katy ISD school board meeting, students packed the room to call for the district to return books to libraries. Samuels and other students plan to continue to protest book bans at a Capitol rally on March 12.
โThis is censorship. This is bad,โ Izu said. โThis is condemning things that shouldnโt be condemned.โ
Book bans exploded across the state and country during this school year. In October, state Rep. Matt Krause, R-Fort Worth, called on schools to disclose whether any of about 850 book titles were in their libraries. He said books โthat might make students feel discomfortโ should also be identified.
Weeks later, Gov. Greg Abbott asked the Texas Education Agency to investigate the availability of โpornographicโ books at school libraries.
Maghan Sadeghi, a James E. Taylor High School senior who is working with book distribution efforts, said Abbottโs statement sounds โlike a bunch of ignorance.โ She notes that her AP literature class requires many readings that reference sex. In โOne Flew over the Cuckooโs Nest,โ it is suggested on several occasions that staff rape patients. In โHamlet,โ sex before marriage is compared to a worm invading a flower before it blooms.
โTheyโre OK with heterosexual scenes, heterosexual ideas. But the second something turns slightly, slightly queer, slightly homosexual, it discomforts them. Itโs the same thing with [people of color] viewpoints,โ Sadeghi said. โโโWhy do we have to remove books about Black people and Asian Americans simply for the sake of white peopleโs comfort?โ
In Leander ISD, students gather together every two weeks to answer a similar question: Should this book be banned?
Vandegrift High School sophomores Ella Scott and Alyssa Hoy created the schoolโs banned-book club after looking at the list of books their district aimed to ban last year. The district would remove some of their favorite books from classroom libraries, and as a result, the students began having discussions about decisions they felt the district made without them.
โI loved โThe Handmaidโs Tale,โโ Scott said, referring to Atwoodโs novel about a totalitarian society that forces fertile women to be raped so they can carry to term the offspring of elite couples. Itโs now one of the restricted books in her school. โI love that book. Forever. Itโs one of my favorites. Seeing it on the list was definitely disorienting.โ
Leander ISD has so far removed the physical copies of 11 book titles from classroom libraries, but nine of those still reside in the schoolโs main and digital libraries, according to Matt Mitchell, Leander ISDโs communications coordinator.
During study hall, dozens of students from all grades meet to discuss one of the banned booksโ plot and purpose, as well as who should have access to its storylines. So far, they generally agree the banned books furthered their education and should be freely accessible in the classroom.
Often, the students discuss how each book introduces to them new perspectives or even historical events.

Pรฉrezโs now-banned novel โOut of Darknessโ follows a love affair between Naomi, a Mexican American high school senior, and Wash, a Black teenager, in the days before the 1937 gas explosion at the New London school, still one of the worst national disasters in history. Many book club students were unaware of this tragic event in the East Texas town of New London.
โThese are very powerful stories,โ Hoy said. โMost of the time, those tough decisions and tough scenes are reasons why they are so powerful and so meaningful to so many people.โ
Last semester, the club had members purchase their books. Recently, the club set up an Amazon wish list to fund book purchases. In 24 hours, donated funds paid for the groupโs books. Hoy said the community has supported the club through the semester.
โEventually, we hope our club wonโt be necessary,โ Scott said. โWe just hope that our voices and our opinions will be considered.โ
Originally published by The Texas Tribune, 03.07.2022, republished with permission for non-commercial purposes.


