Are we as Transgendered and Gay  people any more comfortable with this 
word... and the vast universe of ideas  that this iconic word contains??
 
Elizabeth
 
 
Children's Book Stirs Battle With  Single Word

By JULIE BOSMAN
The New York Times
 
(Feb. 18) -- The word “scrotum” does not often appear  in polite 
conversation. Or children’s literature, for that matter.  



 
 
Librarians Shocked
 


Yet there it is on the first page of “The Higher Power of  Lucky,” by Susan 
Patron, this year’s winner of the Newbery Medal, the most  prestigious award 
in children’s literature. The book’s heroine, a scrappy  10-year-old orphan 
named Lucky Trimble, hears the word through a hole in a wall  when another 
character says he saw a rattlesnake bite his dog, Roy, on the  scrotum. 

“Scrotum sounded to Lucky like something green that comes up  when you have 
the flu and cough too much,” the book continues. “It sounded  medical and 
secret, but also important.” 

The inclusion of the word has  shocked some school librarians, who have 
pledged to ban the book from elementary  schools, and reopened the debate over 
what 
constitutes acceptable content in  children’s books. The controversy was 
first reported by Publishers Weekly, a  trade magazine. 

On electronic mailing lists like Librarian.net, dozens  of literary blogs and 
pages on the social-networking site LiveJournal, teachers,  authors and 
school librarians took sides over the book. Librarians from all over  the 
country, 
including Missoula, Mont.; upstate New York; Central Pennsylvania;  and 
Portland, Ore., weighed in, questioning the role of the librarian when  
selecting — 
or censoring, some argued — literature for children. 

“This  book included what I call a Howard Stern-type shock treatment just to 
see how  far they could push the envelope, but they didn’t have the children 
in mind,”  Dana Nilsson, a teacher and librarian in Durango, Colo., wrote on 
LM_Net, a  mailing list that reaches more than 16,000 school librarians. “How 
very  sad.”
 
The book has already been banned from school libraries in a  handful of 
states in the South, the West and the Northeast, and librarians in  other 
schools 
have indicated in the online debate that they may well follow  suit. Indeed, 
the topic has dominated the discussion among librarians since the  book was 
shipped to schools. 

Pat Scales, a former chairwoman of the  Newbery Award committee, said that 
declining to stock the book in libraries was  nothing short of censorship. 

“The people who are reacting to that word  are not reading the book as a 
whole,” she said. “That’s what censors do — they  pick out words and don’t look 
at the total merit of the book.” 

If it  were any other novel, it probably would have gone unnoticed, unordered 
and  unread. But in the world of children’s books, winning a Newbery is the 
rough  equivalent of being selected as an Oprah’s Book Club title. Libraries 
and  bookstores routinely order two or more copies of each year’s winners, with 
the  books read aloud to children and taught in classrooms. 

“The Higher Power  of Lucky” was first published in November by 
Atheneum/Richard Jackson Books, an  imprint of Simon & Schuster, accompanied by 
a modest 
print run of 10,000.  After the announcement of the Newbery on Jan. 22, the 
publisher quickly ordered  another 100,000 copies, which arrived in bookstores, 
schools and libraries  around Feb. 5. 

Reached at her home in Los Angeles, Ms. Patron said she  was stunned by the 
objections. The story of the rattlesnake bite, she said, was  based on a true 
incident involving a friend’s dog. 
 



 
 
 
And one of the themes of the book is that Lucky is preparing  herself to be a 
grown-up, Ms. Patron said. Learning about language and body  parts, then, is 
very important to her. 

“The word is just so delicious,”  Ms. Patron said. “The sound of the word to 
Lucky is so evocative. It’s one of  those words that’s so interesting 
because of the sound of the word.” 

Ms.  Patron, who is a public librarian in Los Angeles, said the book was 
written for  children 9 to 12 years old. But some librarians countered that 
since 
the heroine  of “The Higher Power of Lucky” is 10, children older than that 
would not be  interested in reading it. 

“I think it’s a good case of an author not  realizing her audience,” said 
Frederick Muller, a librarian at Halsted Middle  School in Newton, N.J. “If I 
were a third- or fourth-grade teacher, I wouldn’t  want to have to explain 
that.”
 

Authors of children’s books sometimes  sneak in a single touchy word or 
paragraph, leaving librarians to choose whether  to ban an entire book over one 
offending phrase. 

In the case of “Lucky,”  some of them take no chances. Wendy Stoll, a 
librarian at Smyrna Elementary in  Louisville, Ky., wrote on the LM_Net mailing 
list 
that she would not stock the  book. Andrea Koch, the librarian at French Road 
Elementary School in Brighton,  N.Y., said she anticipated angry calls from 
parents if she ordered it. “I don’t  think our teachers, or myself, want to do 
that vocabulary lesson,” she said in  an interview. One librarian who 
responded to Ms. Nilsson’s posting on LM_Net  said only: “Sad to say, I didn’t 
order 
it for either of my schools, based on  ‘the word.’ ”



 
Booksellers, too, are watchful for racy content in  books they endorse to 
customers. Carol Chittenden, the owner of Eight Cousins, a  bookstore in 
Falmouth, Mass., said she once horrified a customer with “The  Adventures of 
Blue 
Avenger” by Norma Howe, a novel aimed at junior high school  students. “I 
remember one time showing the book to a grandmother and enthusing  about it,” 
she 
said. “There’s a chapter in there that’s very funny and the word  ‘condom’ 
comes up. And of course, she opens the book right to the page that said  
‘condom.’
 ” 

It is not the first time school librarians have squirmed at  a book’s 
content, of course. Some school officials have tried to ban Harry  Potter books 
from 
schools, saying that they implicitly endorse witchcraft and  Satanism. Young 
adult books by Judy Blume, though decades old, are routinely  kept out of 
school libraries. 

Ms. Nilsson, reached at Sunnyside  Elementary School in Durango, Colo., said 
she had heard from dozens of  librarians who agreed with her stance. “I don’t 
want to start an issue about  censorship,” she said. “But you won’t find men’
s genitalia in quality  literature.” 

“At least not for children,” she added. 


Copyright © 2007 _The New York Times  Company_ 
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