School board leans toward allowing books
- Share via
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA -- Most Newport-Mesa Unified School District board
members say they see no problem with two award-winning novels that fellow
trustee Wendy Leece asked them to reconsider before putting in the hands
of Newport Harbor High School students.
The school board is expected to vote tonight on the use of five
different middle and high school textbooks.
At the last meeting three weeks ago, Leece asked that two of those
books be reconsidered because of the works’ “graphic sexual content.”
Leece requested that the novels “Of Love and Shadows,” by South
American author Isabel Allende, and “Snow Falling on Cedars,” by David
Guterson, be pulled from the high school textbook list before school
board members approve it.
After reading the novels, most trustees said they see no problem with
the books.
“‘Snow Falling on Cedars’ is an elegant book, I thought,” trustee Jim
Ferryman said. “Life ain’t always pretty, and [sexual content] was just a
brief thing. It didn’t dominate the book. It was an insignificant thing,
I thought.”
Trustee Serene Stokes agreed with Ferryman’s assessment.
“I do not want us to be in a position of banning books,” she said. “I
would prefer a youngster read a book that might be questionable, than to
deny them access to a book.”
Stokes also said it was important to trust the recommendations of
teachers and the reasons they want to use the novels.
School board member Martha Fluor agreed, saying the school board’s job
is to create policy and see that it is followed.
“I don’t believe it is my role to tell teachers what to teach or how
to teach it,” Fluor said.
Both books Leece asked to be removed were slated for junior and senior
literature classes at Newport Harbor High.
Allende has won numerous international writing awards, including a
1996 Critics’ Choice Award in the U.S., and Guterson’s novel won the 1995
PEN/Faulkner Award.
Of the other three books the board will vote on, only one was a novel,
“French Lieutenant’s Woman,” by John Fowles, also planned for a junior
literature class.
The others are a sociology textbook and a Lions Club International and
Quest International book on fighting peer pressure called “Changes and
Challenges, Becoming the Best You Can Be.”
Most board members had no issue with these books, either.
This is not the first time Leece has voted against the use of books or
asked that a book be removed. In the past, she has objected to profanity
and science textbook presentations of evolution as fact instead of
theory.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.