
After a Tennessee school board banned a graphic novel about the Holocaust from local middle schools, comic book store owners from near and far have pledged to send students the book for free. https://t.co/KB2paRwwXC
It’s No. 1 on Amazon’s bestseller list. https://t.co/IR4nMRFlLJ
The drive to "ban" books isn't only coming from the right. https://t.co/qiOA7UqFb1
Goldberg's comments came during a segment of the ABC talk show on Monday that focused in part on a Tennessee school district's decision to ban "Maus," a graphic novel that depicts the horrors of the Holocaust. https://t.co/xOu3TzWQNA
There’s a simple reason book “bannings” are up so sharply right now. https://t.co/11KWXvInl5
According to the meeting minutes, the board cited “rough, objectionable language” used in the book about the Holocaust. https://t.co/kGWY20KuqG
"The school board is stupid, but I don't know that they're Nazis." Art Spiegelman, Pulitzer Prize-winning artist and creator of "Maus" reacts to ban by a Tennessee school board. https://t.co/0jTXoCNRco https://t.co/8LD1Yur5oR
"We're living in a moment today when ignorance about that genocide is unfortunately on the rise," Jonathan Greenblatt says, after a Tennessee school board voted to remove "Maus," a graphic novel about the Holocaust, from their curriculum. https://t.co/bswSIuE9tB
"The only thing McMinn County’s ban will do is rob its students of crucial lessons about the world around them from one of the most compelling and accessible works available to a young audience," Nick Ramsey writes. - @NBCNewsTHINK https://t.co/sTjHdLdgD7
A Tennessee school board voted unanimously this month to ban “Maus,” a Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel about the Holocaust, from being taught in its classrooms, saying it contained inappropriate curse words and a depiction of a naked character. https://t.co/FrF6ZQlyaD
Editorial artists wield irony after Art Spiegelman's graphic novel “Maus” is removed from a Tennessee school district's curricula. https://t.co/DhTAWkipp4
ADL chief @JGreenblattADL to @TheView on school board removing "Maus": "I think parents should be engaged, I think school boards should be engaged in what we teach our kids. But there should be some hard and fast principles—like the facts." https://t.co/Ipd0IdPUwl https://t.co/vgXdDWkfxp
Comic book store owner to ship “Maus” free to anyone who asks in Tenn. district where it’s banned https://t.co/EiNOpCGTq4
A Tennessee school district's ban on "Maus" catapulted the book to No. 1 on Amazon's bestseller list — and led multiple bookstores to give free copies to students. https://t.co/Q9DtYTOj9d
Holocaust book Maus hits bestseller list after Tennessee school board ban https://t.co/wOs4yZ7RCQ
Author Art Spiegelman says he felt "jaw-dropping disbelief" upon learning about the decision from a Tennessee school district to ban his graphic novel about the Holocaust. https://t.co/AdtCSLBlYV
Art Spiegelman sees the new ban of his book “Maus” as a “red alert” https://t.co/n7yEhSLxj8
Opinion by Dana Milbank | Current weather: A blizzard of snowflakes in the red states https://t.co/0K90WwSJRT
The U.S. Holocaust Museum this week denounced the McMinn County Board of Education's decision. https://t.co/y17nlqk1y2
"The only thing McMinn County’s ban will do is rob its students of crucial lessons about the world around them from one of the most compelling and accessible works available to a young audience," Nick Ramsey writes. - @NBCNewsTHINK https://t.co/MqTVU0x5jL
Store owner offers to send free copies of "Maus" to families in county where it is banned https://t.co/zaKoBStrO7 https://t.co/1xqTZuHnA7
Spiegelman says he believes the book's banning "is a red alert." "It’s part of a continuum, and just a harbinger of things to come," he said, adding that "the control of people’s thoughts is essential to all of this." https://t.co/V5O4sW0kxd
Sales of "Maus" have soared after it was banned by a Tennessee school board — sending the book and its sequel to the top of Amazon's best sellers list. The Pulitzer-winning graphic novel by Art Spiegelman is about the horrors of the Holocaust. https://t.co/V5O4sW0kxd
Graphic novel Maus tops Amazon best-sellers after school ban https://t.co/dQIur4UGgI
Just days after the banning of “Maus” by a Tennessee school district made national news, two editions of Art Spiegelman’s Pulitzer Prize winning graphic story about the Holocaust have reached the top 20 on https://t.co/fBli86dhsl and are in limited supply. https://t.co/YWdBs4dipV
The title of the two-volume publication, which became the first graphic novel to be awarded a Pulitzer in 1992, is the German word for mouse https://t.co/MShrqZ5rZ4 https://t.co/1tGbdNaqLK
The board vote overrode a state-level curriculum review that had approved the teaching of 'Maus,' based on the real-life Holocaust experiences of Spiegelman's parents in Poland, with Jewish characters depicted as mice and their Nazi persecutors as cats https://t.co/fEm89Cp3v0
A school board in Tennessee has voted to remove the Holocaust-themed graphic novel 'Maus' from its eighth-grade language arts curriculum, citing profanity and nudity contained in the Pulitzer Prize-winning work by cartoonist Art Spiegelman https://t.co/MShrqZ5rZ4 https://t.co/4LaRog0SPC
Tennessee school board bans Holocaust-themed graphic novel 'Maus' https://t.co/blZDcU8F6l https://t.co/nioyWidbuY
Tennessee school board defends ban of Holocaust novel Maus https://t.co/NS8JMA1vId
“Maus,” a graphic novel about the Holocaust published decades ago, reached the top of Amazon’s bestsellers list after a Tennessee school board’s decision to remove the book spurred criticism nationwide https://t.co/Ft3zNofIJf
Goldberg made the comments in the context of a segment about the Holocaust-allegory book “Maus” being limited in a Tennessee school district. https://t.co/o8Akuw28Qt
A Tennessee school board voted to remove “Maus,” a graphic novel about the Holocaust, from its eighth-grade curriculum, citing offensive language, violence and sex https://t.co/0Yee3RFNkU
The McMinn County Board of Education announced "Maus," a Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel, had been removed from the curriculum. They cited concerns about its "use of profanity and nudity" and depiction of "violence and suicide." https://t.co/KMFyNmPcl6
A grim sign of the mentality of the bureaucrats controlling public education https://t.co/F1JHfZxPyF