Popular Information: “An acclaimed MLK-themed novel was removed from a 10th-grade English class in North Carolina. Haywood County Superintendent Dr. Bill Nolte told Popular Information that he pulled the book, Dear Martin by Nic Stone, in a matter of hours after receiving one parent complaint. Nolte said he did not read the book — or even obtain a copy — prior to making the decision.
The 10th-grade parent, Tim Reeves, addressed the Haywood County School Board on January 10. Reeves said that his son received Dear Martin in 10th-grade English class on January 6. Reeves learned from his son that the book contained “explicit language” including the “f-word,” the “s-word,” and “GD.” Reeves said that he was “appalled.” He said the “language” and “sexual innuendos” in the book are “concerning to me as a parent.”
Reeves acknowledged that his son hears “lots of language every day” but objected to its inclusion in a “textbook.” Reeves suggested that providing Dear Martin to 10th graders violated the “age of consent” because “they are still adolescents.”
Dear Martin “tells the story of an Ivy League-bound African American student named Justyce who becomes a victim of racial profiling.” The book covers Justyce’s “experiences at his mostly White prep school and the fallout from his brief detainment.” In the book, Justyce’s diary includes a letter to King in which Justyce explains how he sought to emulate the civil rights icon.
Stone’s book was a finalist for the American Library Association’s William C. Morris Award, a New York Times #1 bestseller, and was named one of TIME Magazine’s top 100 young adult books of all time. Common Sense Media, a non-profit that evaluates books and other media for children, found the book was appropriate for 14-year-olds, who are typically in 9th grade. It also awarded the book 5 out of 5 stars for “overall quality.””