|  What's up with that? The library has put together a banned-book 
			exhibit under the direction of librarian Jaime Fish. Now in its 
			second year, the exhibit coincides with the American Library 
			Association's Banned Books Week, which runs from Sept. 22 to Sept. 
			29.  The selection of banned books consists of well-known works that 
			have been best-sellers at one time or another and have been banned 
			somewhere in the United States. Fish has selected 13 books to highlight: four books of fiction, 
			four of nonfiction and five young adult books. A young adult book is 
			one that appeals to students in junior high and high school. The books are hidden under covers with a clue on the outside as 
			to the title and author of the book. This interactive exhibit 
			invites people to guess the title from the clue. After reading the 
			clue, pull the cover off and see if you guessed correctly. Be 
			prepared to be surprised.  
			 All of the books are owned by the Lincoln Public Library, and 
			three of them were on this year's Lincoln Community High School 
			summer reading list.  Why are these books banned in some locales? One sentence or 
			reference may cause some people to object to the book and want it 
			removed from a library. The reasons are varied but generally run the 
			gamut from references to drug use, sexuality and sexual choice, to 
			language and violence, among others. According to Fish, the demand 
			to ban a book is generally brought up in a local school system.  What are some of the surprises when the cover is removed from a 
			book? A spoiler alert notwithstanding, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's 
			Sherlock Holmes mystery "A Study in Scarlet," banned because of 
			references to Mormons, is certainly a surprise. The classic 
			nonfiction crime book "In Cold Blood" by Truman Capote has some 
			graphic violence. 
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			 "The Diary of Anne Frank" and even Shakespeare's "Macbeth" have 
			both been banned at one time or another. "Macbeth" has been banned 
			in many countries since it was written hundreds of years ago. Anyone 
			fortunate enough to have seen the Illinois Shakespeare Festival's 
			riveting production of "Macbeth" this summer would have seen the 
			violence that may have been used as a reason to request its removal 
			from a library's shelf.  The Lincoln Public Library also has a contest associated with the 
			banned-books exhibit. Young readers can chose three banned books to 
			read from an age-appropriate list compiled by the American Library 
			Association and receive a coupon good for free bowling. Called
			
			Banned Books for Bowling, the contest runs from Sept. 3 to Nov. 
			30. Contact librarian Marlene Perry in the Annex for details.  Do you need to be protected from violent, evil or corrupt 
			thoughts? Or, will you think that censorship can be arbitrary and 
			benefit no one? Stop by the Lincoln Public Library Annex and try the banned-books 
			quiz. The results may surprise you. 
[By
CURT FOX] 
 
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