The is a new look and a new home for the Banned Books Awareness and Reading for Knowledge column.
Education

Banned Books Awareness is Moving
The Banned Books Awareness and Reading for Knowledge Facebook page is just shy of 500 followers. As great as that is, the news is bittersweet. Within a few weeks of starting this project back in 2011 I was contacted by World.edu (then World Education Network) and offered to write...

Peer Review
Sweet! My article this week was shared by The Peer Review on Censorship! #ShareTheKnowledge @eapeer16 http://bit.ly/1ZWJfUm

Banned Books Awareness: The Politics of State-Sponsored Censorship
What is a book burner to do when that pesky United States’ Constitution gets in the way of their censorship attempts? Get laws passed that circumvent them, of course. This week is a look at some of the legislation recently enacted to take away the freedoms granted to citizens...

Banned Books Awareness: Borderlife
It is a new year, with new possibilities. Welcome to 2016! Unfortunately, some people didn’t get the message and are slinking back to the past rather than walking hand in hand into the future. Gader Haya (Borderlife), by Dorit Rabinyan, has received the coveted Bernstein literary prize in Israel...

Banned Words for 2015
I await this list every year and this edition did not disappoint. Lake Superior State University’s 41st Annual List of Banished Words http://bit.ly/1PCS7cX

Finding Your Six Strings
Today I had the privilege of finally meeting Mitch Albom.
Albom has had a meteoric rise over the last 20 years, going from a hometown columnist for the Detroit Free Press (I still enjoy reading his pointed words every Sunday) to a novelist known around the world after successful titles such as Tuesdays with Morrie.
His latest inspirational tale, The Magic Strings of Frankie Presto, was released last month and he has come home to the Detroit area on his book tour- this time at the Barnes and Noble store close to myself. Frankie Presto is a yarn about the power of talent to change our lives and is filled with Albom’s signature prose, known for its passion and inspiration.
I waited in line with Racheal, fresh off of my own memorable signing event last week, content to be just another fan. I went over what I would say to him when finally face-to-face.
I introduced myself and we chatted about Frankie, and I mentioned his words earlier regarding starting as a relative unknown outside of Michigan and that I am now where he was those many years ago. He asked what genre I work with and I told him about my non-fiction and my censorship and literacy cause. I also mentioned that I had a signing event recently for my sixth book. He smiled from ear-to-ear and said, “Six?! That’s a bookshelf! Congratulations!”
In this moment we were equals; kindred spirits with a shared love of the written word. I would have loved to talk to him in detail about the industry but other fans were waiting as eagerly as I was. He signed the book with a smile:
Yes, Mr. Albom, I have found my six strings. I shall play them for as long as I can.

Happy Jolabokaflod!
Best wishes for a wonderful #Jolabokaflod! http://n.pr/1lP7VQf

How to have an intelligent conversation
This is an example of how to have a conversation on a subject and not a bickering disagreement of insults and diatribes: http://bit.ly/1SHTjwg

This who do not learn from history…
I wonder who is next on America’s Ignorance List.
