Books have been challenged and banned throughout time.
Unfortunately, this practice of allowing a few people judge the content of what is acceptable reading continues to this day.
Can you match the following titles of books, which were challenged or banned in the last year, with their authors?
All completed challenges with 100% correct answers will be placed in a raffle drawing at the end of Banned Books Week on October 2.
| (A) The Perks of Being a Wallflower |
Neal Shusterman |
| (B) Deadline |
Akira Toryiama |
| (C) Dead Man in Indian Creek |
Justin Richardson |
| (D) Hills Like White Elephants: a Short Story |
Stephen King |
| (E) Aura |
Jo Knowles |
| (F) Geography Club |
Laurie Halse Anderson |
| (G) A Prayer for Owen Meany |
Ernest Hemingway |
| (H) Bermudez Triangle |
Stephenie Meyer |
| (I) Survivor Type: a Short Story |
Mary Downing Hahn |
| (J) In the Middle of the Night |
Alan Moore |
| (K) Lessons From a Dead Girl |
Zilpha Keatley Snyder |
| (L) The Cartoons that Shook the World |
Jyte Klaussen |
| (M) Eclipse |
Brian McDonald |
| (N) The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen |
Sherman Alexie |
| (O) And Tango Makes Three |
Francesca Lia Block |
| (P) Unwind |
Stephen Chbosky |
| (Q) The Glass Castle |
Margaret Walker |
| (R) Jubilee |
Chris Crutcher |
| (S) The Egypt Game |
Carlos Fuentes |
| (T) Dragon Ball: the Monkey King |
Barbara Ehrenreich |
| (U) Twisted |
Brent Hartinger |
| (V) Baby-Bebop |
Asne Seierstad |
| (W) Absolutely True Diary of a Part-time Indian |
Jeannette Walls |
| (X) Nickeled and Dimed |
Maureen Johnson |
| (Y) The Bookseller of Kabul |
John Irving |