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School Committee member Beverly Dunne, pictured at the Thomas Carroll School.
Deborah Parker / Staff photo


Peabody School Committee member Ed Charest
Linsey Tait / Staff photo


Khaled Hosseini's "The Kite Runner" was assigned to incoming juniors two summers ago.


Mark Haddon's "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time" was picked for incoming freshmen last year.

Published May 05, 2008 02:43 pm - A graphic sexual assault scene in the award-winning book has led to a school board member objecting to it being on the summer reading list for high school juniors.

'Kite Runner' faces censorship fight in Massachusetts


By Stacie N. Galang
THE SALEM NEWS (SALEM, Mass.)

PEABODY, Mass.

The Kite Runner has been denounced as unfit for the high school summer reading list by a local school committee member, touching off a firestorm over possible censorship of the acclaimed novel.

Beverly Dunne, the school committee member, said she has received more than 100 complaints from parents about the graphic descriptions in the book by Khaled Hosseini, who tells about the chaotic modern history of his native Afghanistan from the monarchy to the Taliban.

Dunne said especially upsetting was a scene in the book that describes the rape of a child.

"You're forcing them (students) to read this book that, I'll be honest, if my children had brought it home from the library on their own, I would have considered it trash," Dunne said,

Michalene Hague, head of the high school English department. objected to any effort to exclude the book from the reading list. She said that while it may irritate some students and their parents, it has literary value that details friendship, atonement and the cruelty of war.

"Sometimes people don't want students to feel uncomfortable," Hague said. "Everything is nice and happy."

Hague said the summer reading list is carefully reviewed by teachers at the high school and should not be subject to further scrutiny by the school committee because of a questionable passage here and there.

"They might as well throw out the whole curriculum because there is something in every piece of writing that someone can object to," Hague said. Including, she added, Oedipus Rex or Romeo and Juliet.



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