National Coalition Against Censorship Salutes Judy Blume
By Sara Antill -- Publishers Weekly, 10/21/2009 2:37:00 PM
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Judy Blume and NCAC executive |
Over the years, those forbidden topics have included menstruation, masturbation, and wet dreams, among others. Blume’s frank discussion of such issues, so often taboo in children’s literature, has consistently landed many of her books, such as Deenie, Forever, and Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret, at the top of several censorship lists, making her books some of the most censored in the country.
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Junoz Díaz and Judy Blume. |
Dan Glickman, chairman and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America, chaired the event. “It’s obvious I was never a teenage girl, but my daughter was,” he said, referring to his very pregnant daughter, Amy, who was in the audience. Reading from Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret, he led the crowd in a rousing call of the classic line, “We must, we must, we must increase our bust!”
Along with Glickman’s reading, comedian Rachel Dratch, actress Martha Plimpton, authors Amy Sohn and Elna Baker, and noted First Amendment trial lawyer Martin Garbus also read from Blume’s works Then Again, Maybe I Won’t and Forever.
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A family portrait: daughter Randy Blume (l.), son Lawrence Blume, Judy Blume, and husband George Cooper. |
Blume herself said little on stage, though she thanked, with a radiant smile, those who had organized the event and those who had attended. Judy Gold, in her closing remarks, repeated a sentiment expressed by so many others throughout the night. “To the mother I always wanted,” she said, “thank you, Judy.”



























