February 25, 2014

BOONE, N.C. – The American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina (ACLU-NC) will join members of the Watauga County community, including parents and students, on Thursday, February 27, to speak out against censorship and urge local officials to vote against calls to ban Isabel Allende’s “The House of the Spirits” and other literature from the county high school curriculum.

The Watauga County Board of Education will consider a final appeal seeking to remove Allende’s critically acclaimed novel, which appears on statewide reading lists, from the county school curriculum later that evening. Two board-sanctioned committees have previously voted unanimously to keep the book in the curriculum.

“The freedom to read is essential to a healthy democracy,” said Chris Brook, Legal Director of the ACLU-NC Legal Foundation. “We’re proud to join students and parents from Watauga County in urging their local officials to do the right thing and not go down the slippery slope of banning books that promote critical thinking and classroom dialogue. We hope Watauga officials will join their peers in Randolph and Brunswick counties who earlier this school year recognized the danger of banning books and in the end voted in favor of the freedom to read.”  

WHAT: Community rally and news conference to urge officials to keep “The House of the Spirits” in Watauga County high school honors curriculum, followed by board vote

WHO: Watauga County community members, including parents and students, as well as North Carolina Poet Laureate Joseph Bathanti and representatives from the ACLU of North Carolina

WHEN:Thursday, February 27. Rally and news conference will take place at 4 p.m., followed by the board vote at 7 p.m.

WHERE: The rally will take place in the Table Rock Room in the Plemmons Student Union on the campus of Appalachian State University. 263 Locust St, Boone, NC 28608

Mary Kent Whitaker, a former Watauga County “Teacher of the Year,” taught “The House of the Spirits” in her honors sophomore English classes until the challenge was brought this year. Parents already have the option to opt students out of reading Allende’s novel and choosing an alternative. 

In January, the Brunswick County Board of Education voted to uphold a decision by the county superintendent to keep Alice Walker’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, “The Color Purple,” as part of the AP high school curriculum after a challenge was brought there. In September 2013, the Randolph County Board of Education voted to reverse an earlier vote banning Ralph Ellison’s literary classic, “Invisible Man,” from Randolph County schools.

On Monday, the ACLU-NC Legal Foundation sent a public records request to the Watauga County Board of Education seeking all communications between board members concerning the challenge to “The House of the Spirits.” 

Thursday’s event is co-sponsored by Appalachian State University's Department of English, the student English Club, and the ASU chapter of the honor society Sigma Tau Delta.

Pictured: Watauga County students holding signs and wearing T-shirts in favor of keeping "The House of the Spirits" in classrooms at the Watauga County Board of Education meeting on Feb. 10.