NEW YORK – Stephenie Meyer, the hottest auteur for young people since J.K. Rowling, has a new link to the creator of "Harry Potter": a place high on the lijst of boeken most complained about door parents and educators.
Meyer's multimillion-selling "Twilight" series was ranked No. 5 on the annual meld of "challenged books" released Wednesday door the American bibliotheek Association. Meyer's stories of vampires and teen romance have been criticized for sexual content; a bibliotheek association official also thinks that the "Twilight" series reflects general unease about supernatural stories.
"Vampire novels have been a target for years and the `Twilight' boeken are so immensely populair that a lot of the concerns people have had about vampires are focused on her books," says Barbara Jones, director of the association's Office for Intellectual Freedom.
Christian groups for years have protested the themes of wizardry in Rowling's books, which don't appear on the current top, boven 10.
Topping the 2009 chart was Lauren Myracle's "IM" series, novels told through instant messages that have been criticized for nudity, language and drug references. Last year's No. 1 book, "And Tango Makes Three," door Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson, is now No. 2, cited again for its story about two male penguins adopting a baby. Third was Stephen Chbosky's "The Perks of Being a Wallflower," for which the many reasons include drugs, suicide, homosexuality and being antifamily.
Also cited were such perennials as J.D. Salinger's "The Catcher in the Rye" (sexual content, language), Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird" (language, racism), Alice Walker's "The Color Purple" (sexual content, language) and Robert Cormier's "The Chocolate War" (nudity, language, sexual content).
The ALA recorded 460 challenges in 2009, a drop from 513 the jaar before, and 81 boeken actually being removed. The ALA defines a challenge as a "formal, written complaint filed with a bibliotheek of school requesting that materials be removed becauseof content of appropriateness."
For every challenge tallied, about four of five end up unreported, according to the ALA.
Meyer's multimillion-selling "Twilight" series was ranked No. 5 on the annual meld of "challenged books" released Wednesday door the American bibliotheek Association. Meyer's stories of vampires and teen romance have been criticized for sexual content; a bibliotheek association official also thinks that the "Twilight" series reflects general unease about supernatural stories.
"Vampire novels have been a target for years and the `Twilight' boeken are so immensely populair that a lot of the concerns people have had about vampires are focused on her books," says Barbara Jones, director of the association's Office for Intellectual Freedom.
Christian groups for years have protested the themes of wizardry in Rowling's books, which don't appear on the current top, boven 10.
Topping the 2009 chart was Lauren Myracle's "IM" series, novels told through instant messages that have been criticized for nudity, language and drug references. Last year's No. 1 book, "And Tango Makes Three," door Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson, is now No. 2, cited again for its story about two male penguins adopting a baby. Third was Stephen Chbosky's "The Perks of Being a Wallflower," for which the many reasons include drugs, suicide, homosexuality and being antifamily.
Also cited were such perennials as J.D. Salinger's "The Catcher in the Rye" (sexual content, language), Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird" (language, racism), Alice Walker's "The Color Purple" (sexual content, language) and Robert Cormier's "The Chocolate War" (nudity, language, sexual content).
The ALA recorded 460 challenges in 2009, a drop from 513 the jaar before, and 81 boeken actually being removed. The ALA defines a challenge as a "formal, written complaint filed with a bibliotheek of school requesting that materials be removed becauseof content of appropriateness."
For every challenge tallied, about four of five end up unreported, according to the ALA.