Anonymous Patron writes “What Then Shall We Read? is a reprint of an article from The American Family Association Journal.
A pool of enthusiastic Christian parents and experts suggested titles when they asked them for their top reading recommendations (excluding the Bible) for young readers. Some listed books, some listed authors and some listed both. Fiction, biography, history and more were included in both contemporary and classic titles.”
Recent Posts
- E-Books Can Subvert Book Bans, But Corporate Profit-Seeking Stands in the Way March 10, 2024
- Ten Stories That Shaped 2023 December 15, 2023
- War Sows Disruption at the National Book Awards November 16, 2023
- “No one else is saving it”: the fight to protect a historic music collection November 16, 2023
- No, I Don’t Want to Join Your Book Club November 9, 2023
- Iowa election 2023: Pella Public Library retains independence November 9, 2023
- A door at a Swedish library was accidentally left open 446 people came in, borrowed 245 books. Every single one was returned November 9, 2023
Recent Comments
- Examining Arab and Muslim librarians in fiction – Pop Culture Library Review on Librarian Combats Muslim Stereotypes
- St. Paul libraries face moment of reckoning – LISNews – News For Librarians on Secret and mysterious libraries
- Ellie on Just How Gross Are Library Books, Exactly?
- Prodigious1one on The Teaching Librarian Versus The Teacher
- Jason on Ten Stories That Shaped 2019
- centaurea on Libraries using Internet Trust Tools
LISNews Archives
- March 2024 (1)
- December 2023 (1)
- November 2023 (5)
- October 2023 (1)
- September 2023 (1)
- August 2023 (22)
- February 2023 (3)
- January 2023 (20)
- December 2022 (6)
- February 2022 (3)
- December 2021 (1)
- December 2020 (1)
- July 2020 (11)
- June 2020 (11)
- January 2020 (1)
- December 2019 (2)
- November 2019 (4)
- October 2019 (1)
- June 2019 (1)
- May 2019 (4)
- April 2019 (3)
- March 2019 (11)
- February 2019 (41)
- January 2019 (31)
- December 2018 (6)
- November 2018 (11)
- October 2018 (15)
- September 2018 (9)
- August 2018 (22)
- July 2018 (1)
- June 2018 (1)
- May 2018 (7)
- April 2018 (8)
- March 2018 (5)
- February 2018 (17)
- January 2018 (13)
- December 2017 (8)
- November 2017 (16)
- October 2017 (18)
- September 2017 (11)
- August 2017 (8)
- July 2017 (8)
- June 2017 (21)
- May 2017 (39)
- April 2017 (22)
- March 2017 (15)
- February 2017 (21)
- January 2017 (40)
- December 2016 (20)
- November 2016 (9)
- October 2016 (20)
- September 2016 (48)
- August 2016 (48)
- July 2016 (55)
- June 2016 (61)
- May 2016 (39)
- April 2016 (67)
- March 2016 (81)
- February 2016 (85)
- January 2016 (69)
- December 2015 (90)
- November 2015 (126)
- October 2015 (107)
- September 2015 (85)
- August 2015 (42)
- July 2015 (32)
- June 2015 (35)
- May 2015 (39)
- April 2015 (14)
- March 2015 (60)
- February 2015 (75)
- January 2015 (44)
- December 2014 (30)
- November 2014 (39)
- October 2014 (43)
- September 2014 (30)
- August 2014 (36)
- July 2014 (59)
- June 2014 (46)
- May 2014 (62)
- April 2014 (58)
- March 2014 (52)
- February 2014 (37)
- January 2014 (42)
- December 2013 (41)
- November 2013 (25)
- October 2013 (43)
- September 2013 (28)
- August 2013 (32)
- July 2013 (61)
- June 2013 (51)
- May 2013 (50)
- April 2013 (52)
- March 2013 (68)
- February 2013 (62)
- January 2013 (62)
- December 2012 (53)
- November 2012 (64)
- October 2012 (111)
- September 2012 (109)
- August 2012 (128)
- July 2012 (57)
- June 2012 (75)
- May 2012 (163)
- April 2012 (158)
- March 2012 (109)
- February 2012 (125)
- January 2012 (136)
- December 2011 (109)
- November 2011 (74)
- October 2011 (82)
- September 2011 (95)
- August 2011 (106)
- July 2011 (93)
- June 2011 (102)
- May 2011 (94)
- April 2011 (105)
- March 2011 (100)
- February 2011 (92)
- January 2011 (110)
- December 2010 (124)
- November 2010 (83)
- October 2010 (118)
- September 2010 (115)
- August 2010 (110)
- July 2010 (108)
- June 2010 (113)
- May 2010 (78)
- April 2010 (121)
- March 2010 (191)
- February 2010 (182)
- January 2010 (168)
- December 2009 (129)
- November 2009 (116)
- October 2009 (131)
- September 2009 (149)
- August 2009 (162)
- July 2009 (166)
- June 2009 (189)
- May 2009 (112)
- April 2009 (164)
- March 2009 (185)
- February 2009 (151)
- January 2009 (173)
- December 2008 (200)
- November 2008 (155)
- October 2008 (252)
- September 2008 (267)
- August 2008 (193)
- July 2008 (208)
- June 2008 (161)
- May 2008 (208)
- April 2008 (253)
- March 2008 (201)
- February 2008 (246)
- January 2008 (185)
- December 2007 (200)
- November 2007 (208)
- October 2007 (241)
- September 2007 (227)
- August 2007 (269)
- July 2007 (201)
- June 2007 (205)
- May 2007 (157)
- April 2007 (217)
- March 2007 (250)
- February 2007 (183)
- January 2007 (181)
- December 2006 (163)
- November 2006 (180)
- October 2006 (170)
- September 2006 (215)
- August 2006 (210)
- July 2006 (202)
- June 2006 (257)
- May 2006 (280)
- April 2006 (271)
- March 2006 (347)
- February 2006 (284)
- January 2006 (300)
- December 2005 (267)
- November 2005 (238)
- October 2005 (364)
- September 2005 (349)
- August 2005 (377)
- July 2005 (382)
- June 2005 (403)
- May 2005 (371)
- April 2005 (420)
- March 2005 (367)
- February 2005 (368)
- January 2005 (346)
- December 2004 (311)
- November 2004 (260)
- October 2004 (308)
- September 2004 (228)
- August 2004 (319)
- July 2004 (395)
- June 2004 (338)
- May 2004 (288)
- April 2004 (364)
- March 2004 (348)
- February 2004 (438)
- January 2004 (266)
- December 2003 (222)
- November 2003 (226)
- October 2003 (281)
- September 2003 (317)
- August 2003 (315)
- July 2003 (278)
- June 2003 (282)
- May 2003 (265)
- April 2003 (271)
- March 2003 (249)
- February 2003 (283)
- January 2003 (210)
- December 2002 (186)
- November 2002 (184)
- October 2002 (222)
- September 2002 (210)
- August 2002 (207)
- July 2002 (184)
- June 2002 (166)
- May 2002 (160)
- April 2002 (195)
- March 2002 (183)
- February 2002 (195)
- January 2002 (203)
- December 2001 (203)
- November 2001 (238)
- October 2001 (183)
- September 2001 (153)
- August 2001 (204)
- July 2001 (243)
- June 2001 (176)
- May 2001 (92)
- April 2001 (116)
- March 2001 (153)
- February 2001 (142)
- January 2001 (131)
- December 2000 (110)
- November 2000 (124)
- October 2000 (128)
- September 2000 (132)
- August 2000 (138)
- July 2000 (166)
- June 2000 (135)
- May 2000 (120)
- April 2000 (121)
- March 2000 (181)
- February 2000 (163)
- January 2000 (54)
- November 1999 (37)
Christian Girls: No Narnia for you!
Is ‘public school mom’ a putdown in the evangelical Christian community? Why did she have to be singled out that way?
In any case, I thought she had the best selection of books, but I thought it was odd she didn’t want her daughter reading The Chronicles of Narnia, one of the best series of books for children, ever.
Narrow Input Leads to Narrow Output
I’m somewhat concerned at seeing any narrowly focused reading list for children, regardless of their parents’ ideological persuasion; they IMHO need the broadest possible range of exposure to ideas in order to become intelligent, thoughtful adults.
Re:Christian Girls: No Narnia for you!
It’s not a put-down. It was a lead-in to the discussion of all the “bad” books that were being pushed on her kids by the secular school system. She “was frustrated with the content of many of the popular books targeting her children.” They were presumably exposed to those books through the public schools. This, of course, is one of the primary reasons the home schooling movement has such a large contingent of evangelical Xtians – they don’t want their children exposed to contrary points of view.
I also didn’t see anything that said she didn’t want her daughter reading The Chronicles of Narnia (which I don’t like much, by the way). There was a distinct gender bias in the comparison of the list of books for her son and daughter, but no indication at all that either of them would be precluded from reading the other’s books.
On a plus side
Usually the AFA is against intelligence, education, free thought, tolerance, imagination, creativity, common courtesy, freedom of expression, freedom of thought, and reading.
It is nice to see them partially back reading, while still engaging in all the negative activity.
This group represents everything that is wrong with religion. I am not shocked by anything they do especially now that they have declared Squarebob Spongepants gay. I can’t believe they have not railed against Bert and Ernie yet.
Re:Narrow Input Leads to Narrow Output
Throwing someone into the deep end of the pool doesn’t make them a good swimmer.
Re:Christian Girls: No Narnia for you!
As a SciFi/Fantasy fan, I was not impressed by Narnia even as a child, of course thanks to a great library I was reading Asimov, Bradbury, Wells, Verne and Heinlein while most kids were reading that tripe.
It is a a safe bet that when it involves the AFA you cannot assume that there are no limitations of crossreading, they are very specific as to what you are allowed to do/not do, think/not think.
Re:Narrow Input Leads to Narrow Output
Never letting them leave the shallow end means they will never reach their potential.
Of course censors would prefer people do not reach their potential, since it would include getting rid of censorship.
Re:Narrow Input Leads to Narrow Output
A parent is a ‘censor’ a teacher, a police officer, a law maker are all ‘censors’. Anyone who is in a position to put limits on someone else’s activities are in some way a ‘censor’. And they are not all Darth Vader as much you and others would like to label them and myself as such.
Although I am wearing a snazzy black shirt and black tie today… but the tie has got the Hulk on it…
Re:Narrow Input Leads to Narrow Output 🙂
If the jackboot fits there Darth
Re:On a idiot side
As opposed to your open-mindedness and tolerance?
Re:On a idiot side
Ahh an anonymous coward with the temerity to call me an idiot because I object to censorship. I am honored and give you my thanks!
Re:Narrow Input Leads to Narrow Output
they IMHO need the broadest possible range of exposure to ideas in order to become intelligent, thoughtful adults.
Too bad this doesn’t apply to colleges or universities throughout this country. It would be nice if the liberal arts and soft sciences in American colleges and universities were exposed to conservative ideas. It would also be nice if there were more than token amounts of conservatives teaching in those disciplines. Don’t you think it would be a good thing if college students (who are adults) were exposed to a conservative sociology or english professor?
It would be refreshing if the same amount of outrage that leftists had in the defense of the fraudulent Ward Churchil would be spent in defense of Larry Summers.
I won’t hold my breath waiting for any of those things to happen.
Re:On a idiot side
Hits a nerve, doesn’t it?
Re:Narrow Input Leads to Narrow Output
I fully agree that students need to be offered ALL sides of issues, otherwise they are programming victims instead of students.
The only thing I am intolerant of is people who think their side is the only RIGHT side. Which means I dislike the far right nuts, and the far left nuts.