STEVE SMITH -- What’s Up?
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For those of you who believed that Newport-Mesa school board member
Wendy Leece’s recent attempt to keep two books out of the hands of high
schoolers was a failed censorship try, for those of you who could only
answer her request with name-calling and for those of you whose replies
were just plain juvenile and conveniently avoided the substance of the
issue, I have some startling information.
Two and a half years ago, a teacher at Costa Mesa High School
submitted a secondary reading list to the Board of Trustees in the same
way a Newport Harbor High School teacher did a few weeks ago, causing
Leece to make her objections.
In the earlier case, Leece objected to two books, “At Last We Enter
Paradise” and “A Perfect Time,” both poetry books by Richard Jones. The
recommendation or rejection of the book list appeared on the school board
agenda for June 9, 1998. Here is an excerpt from the transcript of that
meeting:
“Mrs. [Judy] Franco moved adoption of the secondary textbooks, as
listed, except for ‘At Last We Enter Paradise.’ Mrs. [Dana] Black
seconded the motion and it carried by majority vote, with Mrs. Leece
still expressing opposition to the textbook, ‘A Perfect Time.’ ”
Translation: Every school board member who was present at the meeting
objected to the inclusion of “At Last We Enter Paradise” to the reading
list. The book was denied. The vote would have been unanimous except for
Leece, who also wanted “A Perfect Time” kept off the list.
No outcry, no screams of censorship. No one called Franco a “religious
conservative” for moving to ban “At Last We Enter Paradise” and no one
suggested that Black appoint a “values czar,” whatever that is, for
seconding the motion.
As hard as it may be for many readers to believe, Leece’s school board
colleagues agreed with her that a book was out of bounds for high school
students. Accordingly, they did what they are supposed to do as trustees
and sent the message that the book exceeded the limits of their
standards.
There are, in fact, two standards. One applies when Leece is on the
losing end of a 6-1 vote. At that time, it’s OK to call her names and
distort her intentions. The other standard is when school board members
act to do the very same thing. Then, they are acting in the best
interests of our children.
Since I first wrote about my support of Leece’s proposal, I have read
the two books and still agree with her.
“Of Love and Shadows” is, in my opinion, a glorified romance novel
with the steam turned up. The book is supposed to be the story of a noble
fight against a military dictatorship by two journalists, but it is
really little more than a silly love story, with adults living their
sexual lives without responsibility.
One of the main characters, Irene, is engaged to an Army captain. He
is frequently unfaithful to her but does not love his other lovers, so
it’s OK to cheat. Irene then falls in love with her colleague, Francisco,
and has an affair with him.
Irene’s mother travels twice a year for trysts with Michel, a man
young enough to be her son. After each trip, she does not feel any shame
or remorse; she feels young and alive.
So people are cheating on loved ones and having lots of casual sex.
There is no consequence to all this -- no shame, no sexually transmitted
diseases and no pregnancy. It’s all neat and tidy and trite.
In the book, there are many graphic passages, the most disturbing of
which is the description of a soldier’s ravaging of a nearly dead
15-year-old girl who dies during the rape. According to six of the seven
members of our school board, all this is perfectly suitable for children
to read.
If you need further proof that this book is less a literary
masterpiece than a novel of no consequence, read the second half of a
review excerpt by the New York Times that appears on the back cover of my
paperback copy:
“She [author Isabelle Allende] can just as deftly depict loving
tenderness as convey the high fire of eroticism. And when you
successfully merge sex and politics with a noble cause, how can you go
wrong?”
Did this review praise the research conducted by the author or come
near to calling this a classic? No, it focused on sex.
The Orange County Public Library must agree with Leece too, because in
the entire system there is only one copy of this monumental novel
available anywhere.
I don’t expect those who called Leece a censor or other names to write
or phone this paper and say they were wrong. I can only hope that these
people now understand that our school board has a history of rejecting
inappropriate books and that it has nothing whatsoever to do with
censorship. It’s strictly a matter of declining standards.
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer. Readers
may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at (949) 642-6086.
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