Now Book Banners are Going After Little Free Libraries!

Book banners won’t stop until they can control everything you’re allowed to read.

Not satisfied with attacking school libraries, public libraries, publishers, authors, or bookstores, they’re now threatening owners of Little Free Libraries (private citizens) with criminal prosecution.


Book banners won’t stop until they can control everything you’re allowed to read.


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If you're not familiar with the concept of Little Free Libraries, they're small decorative boxes that community members can put in their yards. These boxes allow people to leave a book or take one.

Advocates of school book bans shifted their sights toward Utah's Little Free Libraries after State Rep. Sahara Hayes planned to add banned books to the volunteer-run curbside collections in her district.

Utah Parents United called for Hayes' prosecution and previously trained community members to report librarians to police.

They argued last week that owners of Little Free Libraries should face prosecution if they exercise their freedom of speech and make banned books available to the community.


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Utah placed a blanket ban on at least 13 books in schools, including works by Sarah J. Maas, Judy Blume, Rupi Kaur, Margaret Atwood, and others. Free speech advocates say this is the first statewide book ban.