
Under Trump, book bans have gone federal. Some readers are fighting back.
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TODAY'S STARTING POINT
An MIT professor's study of lyric poetry in Elizabethan England, a children's book about a freckled 7-year-old girl, and Vice President JD Vance's best-selling memoir about his working-class roots would seem to have little in common. Yet they all appear to have gotten swept up in the Trump administration's efforts to restrict Americans' access to certain books.
Book bans in the US predate the founding of the country. The first known instance was in 1637 in what is now Quincy, Mass. Most efforts to remove books from libraries and school curriculums are usually at the state and local level, hashed out in legislatures, town council meetings, and school board elections.
But the Trump administration's various efforts to make them a priority of the federal government is novel.
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'It's a definite escalation,' Sabrina Baêta, who researches book bans and censorship at PEN America, a free-expression nonprofit. Today's newsletter explains the administration's efforts and how some are resisting them.
Flying off the shelves
Most directly, the Trump administration
The administration says the culling reflects
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The Defense Department has also allegedly removed or placed under review hundreds of books from the PreK-12 schools it runs for the children of service members in the US and abroad. According to
'1984,' George Orwell's classic about a government that censors information and polices language.
Why officials would have pulled some of those books for review, including Vance's, isn't clear. A spokeswoman for the Department of Defense Education Activity, which oversees Pentagon-run schools, said she couldn't comment 'as this matter is currently the subject of active litigation.'
But for Baêta, of PEN America, the notion that a Trump order could end up removing a book by his own vice president 'speaks to the pernicious nature of censorship.' Trying to stifle certain topics, she said, inevitably sucks in ideas that even proponents might not find objectionable. Arguments in the ACLU's case are scheduled for early next month.
The administration's actions could also make it harder for other Americans to access books.
In March, President Trump signed an executive order that aimed to gut the Institute of Museum and Library Services, which provides federal grants to libraries around the country. A judge has
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Trump
The next chapter
But the administration's efforts, and ongoing attempts in many states and localities to limit access to certain books, have triggered a response from free-speech advocates.
Most Americans
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Book bans can also turn reading itself into an act of resistance. Last fall, the ACLU's Massachusetts branch started
Of course, some books do contain information that every kid may not be ready to read. 'The Kite Runner' depicts horrible violence and child abuse and those under 18 needed a parent's permission join the ACLU of Massachusetts' book club to read it. But Baêta argues that engaging with challenging subjects in a classroom, in a book club, or with a parent is better than encountering them for the first time in the real world.
'We don't want students to be coming across uncomfortable topics in their lives for the first time in real life,' she said. 'We want that to be in a book. What softer introduction is there?'
🧩 4 Down:
POINTS OF INTEREST
The MBTA has said it needs at least $25 billion for repairs, far more than it's budgeting.
Lane Turner/Globe Staff
Boston and Massachusetts
Harvard connection:
House Republicans accused the university of having 'hosted and trained' members of a Chinese paramilitary organization and demanded the school turn over information
Scathing:
The state auditor accused Governor Maura Healey's administration
Nuts and bolts:
The MBTA's board of directors approved a $9.8 billion budget for construction projects that
Karen Read:
Her defense attorney continued to cross-examine a digital forensics analyst over his credentials and
School's in:
The state education board voted to require trade schools to
Trump administration
Deportations:
The administration appears to have begun deporting migrants to South Sudan, a war-torn African country, despite a court order. (
Another one?
Shortly after ending a probe into New York City Mayor Eric Adams, the administration is investigating former NY governor Andrew Cuomo, the front-runner to replace Adams, over testimony Cuomo gave to Congress. (
Local resistance:
Massachusetts residents
RFK Jr.:
Trump's health secretary
Not quite:
A Democratic senator asked Kristi Noem, Trump's homeland security secretary, to define habeas corpus, which protects against wrongful detention. Noem said it lets the president remove people from the US. (
No tax on tips:
The Senate unexpectedly passed a bill that would create a tax deduction for workers who earn tips, a Trump campaign promise. It now goes to the House. (
The Nation and the World
SCOTUS vs. Maine:
The US Supreme Court ordered the Maine House to restore a conservative lawmaker's right to speak and vote on the floor. The House had censured her for posting a transgender minor's name and photo online. (
George Wendt:
The actor who earned six consecutive Emmy nominations for his performance as Norm Peterson on the NBC comedy 'Cheers' died at age 76. (
Diddy trial:
The mother of Cassie Ventura, Sean Combs's former girlfriend, testified that she photographed bruises Combs allegedly left on her daughter. (
BESIDE THE POINT
🎓
Valedictory:
Across New England, graduating high school athletes
💬
Talker:
Nobody's spoken the Proto-Indo-European language in 4,000 years, but billions speak one descended from it. A new book explains how it spread around the world. (
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☀️
Fun in the sun:
From parades to the ice cream trail, consider these nine
ways to
📱
Hear that?
If Siri eavesdropped on you sometime over the last decade, Apple might owe you money. (
⛳
Second wind:
Burnt out, he decided to play every golf course in Massachusetts.
📸 Authorial dispute:
Who really took the famous 'napalm girl' photograph during the Vietnam War? A new documentary upends the official story. (
🎵
Fan guide:
Here's what's new at this year's
Thanks for reading Starting Point.
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