RUTHERFORD COUNTY, TN - About two weeks ago, the ACLU of Tennessee and PEN America filed a lawsuit against the Rutherford County School Board for banning more than 145 books from school libraries. The lawsuit argues that banning books that talk about LGBTQ+ issues, race, and racism violates students’ First Amendment rights. Some school board members banned books without reading them, instead relying on a political group's website for ratings. Authors like Judy Blume and John Green are supporting the lawsuit. The goal is to stop the bans and make sure students have access to a wide range of ideas and voices in their libraries.
MORE DETAILS: About 12-days ago, the American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee (ACLU), along with attorney Kerry Knox, filed a lawsuit on behalf of three Rutherford County families and PEN America against the Rutherford County Board of Education, in response to the banning and restriction of more than 145 books from school libraries in the county. The three families, who are anonymous, include two rising freshmen and a rising senior who will attend Rutherford County schools next year. PEN America, a national free expression organization, joined the lawsuit on behalf of its author members, 32 of whom have had a total of 53 books banned or restricted by the Rutherford County school board.
“The First Amendment is a crucial pillar of our country’s democracy,” said ACLU-TN Legal Director Stella Yarbrough. “A vocal minority of people are attempting to speak for Rutherford County parents by banning books – particularly those that address LGBTQ+ rights, race and racism – as part of a coordinated attack on inclusive education. As these baseless bans continued to escalate, we had no choice but to go to court to defend authors’ free speech and students’ freedom to learn.”
The Rutherford County school board began banning materials in the spring of 2024 through informal requests by school board members, initially without any public meeting or vote of the board. By September 2024, members of the board indicated that rather than reading the books they were banning, they had begun to rely almost exclusively on a website and a rating system created by individuals associated with the far-right organization Moms for Liberty to target books for removal. The website gives books poor ratings if they include LGBTQ+ characters; “racial, social or religious commentary” the organization considers “controversial;” profanity; and nudity; among other characteristics.
PEN America Deputy CEO and Chief Legal Officer Eileen Hershenov said, “PEN America is fighting for the rights of our author members who are under heightened pressure from forces trying to throttle literary voices they don’t like. Banning these writers’ books is unlawful and denies students the rich education they have the right to. If this censorship is allowed to stand, generations to come will be robbed of both the joy of reading great stories and the information they need to become engaged citizens of a diverse, dynamic, and pluralistic democracy.”
While the board voted in November 2024 to have a committee of school library materials specialists review and report on the books, the board then ignored the recommendations in more than 70 percent of the instances when they evaluated books, choosing to remove books at nearly every meeting — including educationally valuable books frequently featured in the AP English Literature curriculum and others that have been in school libraries for years.
“Book bans are a clear violation of the First Amendment, effectively gagging authors and denying students the opportunity to read, debate, and learn from crucial, acclaimed, and historical works,” said co-counsel Kerry Knox. “Denying Tennessee students access to the same materials as their peers puts them at a significant disadvantage as they develop into future community leaders.”
The lawsuit asserts that the First Amendment protects students’ right to access information and ideas, and that the government cannot censor books solely based on dislike of or disagreement with the ideas in a book. The First Amendment also protects authors’ ability to communicate their ideas to students free from undue government interference and discrimination based on viewpoint. The plaintiffs are asking the court to block Rutherford County from continuing to ban books from school libraries, and to reinstate many of the materials that have already been banned or restricted.
Plaintiff Rachel Roe, a rising freshman who is participating in the lawsuit under a pseudonym, said, “I noticed that many of the removed books involve stories about LGBTQ characters or tell stories about racism or the experiences of non-white authors growing up in America. I think it is wrong to remove these books because I think that books in a library should represent everybody. Everyone should feel included and read stories about themselves. A library without these books would just be boring.”
PEN America’s affected author members include Laurie Halse Anderson, Jesse Andrews, Elana K. Arnold, Jay Asher, Margaret Atwood, Judy Blume, Deb Caletti, Mary H.K. Choi, Mike Curato, Jessie Ann Foley, E.R. Frank, Alex Gino, John Green, Jenny Han, Ellen Hopkins, Khaled Hosseini, George M. Johnson, Brian Katcher, Rupi Kaur, A.S. King, Jean Kwok, Malinda Lo, Gregory Maguire, Mindy McGinnis, Casey McQuiston, Preston Norton, Ashley Hope Pérez, Jodi Picoult, Amy Reed, Rainbow Rowell, Cory Silverberg and Angie Thomas.
Author Elana K. Arnold, said, “My work and the work of my fellow authors on this list all have significant literary value. No serious person can argue otherwise. Attempts to call these books obscene or pornographic by taking specific lines out of context, and claiming they represent the works as a whole, is either ignorant, intellectually dishonest, or both. Readers deserve free access to books. I stand in solidarity with the librarians, teachers, parents, and educators who acknowledge that our duty is to the freedom of information, the art of literature, and the protection of young people’s access to the full library collections to which they are entitled.”
Books Listed as being removed in the 2025 school year: "In accordance with Board Policy and Tennessee State law (TCA 49-6-3803), the following books are being reviewed for content concerning potential violations related to sexually explicit materials in school libraries. These titles will appear before the board for final decision, as stated in Policy 4.403. This list includes titles that had holdings in school library collections."
Title (From RCS Website) |
Decision/Date |
A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
A Lesson in Vengeance by Victoria Lee |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
A Stolen Life by Jaycee Lee Dugard |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Adjustment Day by Chuck Palahniuk |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
All Boys Aren't Blue by George M. Johnson |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
Almost Perfect by Brian Katcher |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Saenz |
Removed by school board (01/09/25) |
Assassination Classroom Volume 1 by Yusei Matsui |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Assassination Classroom Volume 11 by Yusei Matsui |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Assassination Classroom Volume 2 by Yusei Matsui |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Assassination Classroom Volume 3 by Yusei Matsui |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Assassination Classroom Volume 4 by Yusei Matsui |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Assassination Classroom Volume 5 by Yusei Matsui |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Assassination Classroom Volume 6 by Yusei Matsui |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Assassination Classroom Volume 7 by Yusei Matsui |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Assassination Classroom Volume 8 by Yusei Matsui |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Ask the Passengers by A.S. King |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Beartown by Fredrick Bachman |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Bumped by Megan McCafferty |
Retained with parental consent. |
Burned by Ellen Hopkins |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Catch 22 Joseph Heller |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Chosen by P.C. Cast & Kristen Cast |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Concrete Rose by Angie Thomas |
Removed by school board (01/09/25) |
Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell |
Removed by school board (01/09/25) |
Fade by Lisa McMann |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
Fire Force 01 By Atsushi Ohkubo |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
Fly on the Wall -How One Girl Saw by Everything E. Lockhart |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Forever… By Judy Blume |
Removed by school board (01/23/25) |
Gabi a Girl in Pieces by Isabel Quintero |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Glass by Ellen Hopkins |
Removed by school board (01/23/25) |
Go Ask Alice "Anonymous" |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Grown by Tiffany D. Jackson |
Removed by school board (01/23/25) |
Home Body - A Collection of Poems by Rupi Kaur |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter by Erika L. Sanchez |
Removed by school board (01/09/25) |
Lady Midnight (1) (The Dark Artifices) by Cassandra Clare |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Lo |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Lexicon by Max Barry |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
Living Dead Girl by E. Scott |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Maybe Now by Colleen Hoover |
Removed by school board (04/08/25) |
Milk and Honey by Rupi Kaur |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Neanderthal Opens the Door to the Universe by Preston Norton |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Piccolt |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Out of Darkness by Ashley Hope Perez |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Perfect By Ellen Hopkins |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Perfect Chemistry by By Simone Elkeles |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Plan A By Deb Caletti |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
Ready Player One by Ernest Cline |
Removed by school board (01/23/25) |
Red at the Bone by Jacqueline Woodson |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Relish: My Life in the Kitchen |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Rumble by Ellen Hopkins |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Shine By Lauren Myracle |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Shout: A Memoir by Laurie Halse Anderson |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Speak: The Graphic Novel by Laurie Halse Anderson |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Storm & Fury by Jennifer Armentrout |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
The Best Laid Plans by Cameron Lund |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
The Body: A Guide for Occupants by Bill Bryson |
Retained by school board (2/6/25) |
The Detour by S.A. Bodeen |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
The DUFF Designated Fat Friend by Kody Keplinger |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
The Female of the Species by Mindy McGinnis |
Removed by school board (01/23/25) |
The Testaments (Sequel to Handmaid's Tale) by Margaret Atwood |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
The Truth About Alice by Jennifer Mathieu |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
The Upside of Unrequited by Becky Albertalli |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher |
Removed by school board (01/23/25) |
This One Summer by Mariko Tamaki |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Vampire Academy: Book 1 by Richelle Mead |
Removed by Board (01/09/25) |
Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
Yolk By Mary H.K. Choi |
Removed by school board (03/07/25) |
You Know, Sex: Bodies, Gender, Puberty, and Other Things |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
You Too? 25 voices share their #MeToo stories edited by Janet Gurtler. |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
Juliet Takes a Breath by Gabby Rivera |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
Living Dead Girl by Elizabeth Scott |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
Looking for Alaska by John Green |
Removed by school board (01/09/25) |
Me and Early and the Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
The Carnival at Bray by Jessie Ann Foley |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
The Kite Runner (Graphic Novel) by Khaled Hosseini |
Removed by school board (01/23/25) |
The Sun and her Flowers by Rupi Kaur |
Removed by school board (2/6/25) |
This is Kind of an Epic Love Story by Kacen Callender |
Removed by school board (04/09/25) |
MORE INFORMATION:
- A complete list of the books that have been banned by the Rutherford County Board of Education can be found at: https://www.rcschools.net/
apps/pages/index.jsp?uREC_ID= 525032&type=d&pREC_ID=2636708 - A copy of the complaint filed today can be found at: https://live-aclu-
tennessee.pantheonsite.io/ sites/default/files/field_ documents/filed_complaint.pdf - This statement can be found online at: https://www.aclu-tn.org/
en/press-releases/aclu-tn- files-lawsuit-behalf-families- pen-america-halt-book-bans- rutherford-county
ABOVE SOURCE: Release from the ACLU of Tennessee and, as noted, the RCS website.
PEN America stands at the intersection of literature and human rights to protect free expression in the United States and worldwide. We champion the freedom to write, recognizing the power of the word to transform the world. Our mission is to unite writers and their allies to celebrate creative expression and defend the liberties that make it possible. Learn more at pen.org PEN America has documented the steep rise in book bans in schools across the country since 2021, counting more than 16,000 instances of bans since then. More information can be found at: https://pen.org/book-bans/
The ACLU of Tennessee, the state affiliate of the national American Civil Liberties Union, is a private, non-profit, non-partisan public interest organization dedicated to defending and advancing civil liberties and civil rights through advocacy, coalition-building, litigation, legislative lobbying, community mobilization and public education. For more information, visit www.aclu-tn.org.