Ratings2
Average rating5
Twelve-year-old June Harper, shocked when her parents go on a campaign to clear the Dogwood Middle School library of objectionable books, starts a secret banned books library in an empty locker.
Reviews with the most likes.
I'm a rule follower to a fault. But this is one type of rebel I could align with – a Rebel Librarian! Before we get into what I love about this book, let's get one minor distraction out of the way. It's not really that negative and most middle grade students will likely not even notice the improbability surrounding the magnitude of books banned . Very drastic measures were taken in the library with regard to removal of “banned” books, which were challenged by parents in the school. In reality, librarians have additional resources that would have been implemented compared to what the librarian in the story was able to accomplish. But as I stated, I don't think it detracts from the moral of the story. Now to get to it! This book made me want to stand up and cheer for the main character, June Harper. She respected authority while also challenging it. She had to make important decisions about who to align herself with. She asserted herself and stood up for what she believed – the right to read books of all kinds. I think this is a great read for 5-7th graders, although it is listed as middle grade. There is a bit of relationship drama that is more early YA, but nothing a mature middle grader can't handle. As a book lover, little library hunter and mom to two daughters (age 6 and 10), this book is one that I will be purchasing for them to read. This would also make for a great discussion book for classrooms, families or kids book club. It introduces many topics that are important in our current culture, but brings them to a level that is understandable for middle grade to young adults. It has themes that embrace empowering young girls to stand up for what they know is right, encourages reading of diverse books and developing unlikely friendships. After reading this book, I would like to cheer aloud for the Rebel Librarian in us all! Stand up for the freedom to read!
this sounds like something i would have done as a kid, and now i am in school to be a librarian too
10/10 real good book
There is nothing more dangerous seventh grader June Harper's life than.... books. At least, that's what her parents and really almost every adult in Dogwood would have you believe. When her uber strict parents get the librarian suspended and the school makes sure all of the good– I mean “terrible,” books are removed from the library (e.g. The Lightning Thief, Goosebumps, Holes, The Crossover, etc.), June finds herself at a crossroads. Will she sit down and accept the restricted, vanilla life her parents and the school have forced upon her and her peers or will she be the hero that Dogwood Middle does not deserve, but desperately needs?
I describe this book as “Fahrenheit 451.. but for children.” I loved this book– not only do we see growth in June as a character in her relationships with her peers, but we also see her grow stronger in her convictions to stand up for what she believes in and stand up for herself, especially when the adults in her life, namely her parents, were being so absurd she might as well have called them Camus and Kierkegaard instead of Mom and Dad.
(..... get it? because... they were absurdists.)
There were parts of this book where my mouth literally fell open at how crazy her mom and dad were being (like when they were bad mouthing the teaching profession– ohhhhhhh not a thing someone with a BS in education wants to hear; I was shooting daggers at my car radio). But that's alright because the last conversation June has with her dad at the end of the book– that last line from her– tooootally made up for having to listen to her mom say that becoming a teacher was throwing your life away.