In at least half a dozen states, librarians have joined forces with civil rights groups to oppose book bans, often facing personal and professional repercussions
For decades, libraries served as a safe haven for many queer and marginalized youths in eastern Texas, says former county library director Rhea Young. Unlike the school cafeteria, the library was a space where they could explore and find acceptance in who they wanted to be.
“There were books where they can find characters like them, and realize it’s okay to be who they are,” Young said. “There needs to be more places like that, not fewer.”
That all changed two summers ago when, amid a wave of book bans, Montgomery county officials asked Young to move books with LGBTQ+ themes or “sexually explicit” content at the public library into a section restricted to readers 18 years and older, and instructed her to order more titles with conservative Christian content.


When I was a kid, the evangelical school I went to banned Harry Potter and had a book burning.
I was never into Harry Potter to begin with, but j would be curious to know how they’re feel about it now that JK Rowling is an openly hateful bigot? Like is magic and sorcery suddenly not a dangerous message from the devil as long as it comes with a TERF disclaimer?
They tend to move the goalposts: “it’s just a children’s book, why do you care so much”
There is no logic that applies here. The only goal is making people not like them, disappear.