I had the exact same thought. I think the map would work way better if states without ban had a significantly lighter shade of grey (or even white)
As is the ones with 1-10 bans stand out by far the most due to the red being so bright (would need to be a bit more desaturated like the others). And the worse offenders are harder to see against the dark grey.
I like that 0 is very distinct, because they should stand out... But everything else should really be a gradient between two colors, and neither of them should be black when zero is grey....
It's a little sad to see Mass on there, I gotta look up what got banned. I'm assuming it was in some deeply red school district as there's some surprisingly conservative areas of the state.
It's a shame to see Gender Queer on there. I read it for my university class on comic art and thought it was really interesting. I would probably say it's more of an adult book, but I think just about all the books I read for high school English were adult books.
The author is really cool too. When the covid lockdown happened my professor emailed them asking if there were any digital options for the book, since a lot of students relied on the local library or might have left their copies in their dorms. They sent my professor a pirated link and gave permission for us to use it.
Are these books banned state wide? Or banned in a single school district in the state? While we should be raising awareness of the banning of books by conservatives, I am confused by this graphic and how I can use it for actionable change.
I am not for outright banning of books, but I am against mandatory reading of certain books for classes. There are some pretty sexually graphic scenes in a number of books not marketed as erotic that I believe have no place in the standard classroom or the elementary school library. A certian section at a public library, sure, but schools, no. It is like those backrooms at blockbuster.