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  • DC Public Library hops on ‘The Banned Wagon’ for Banned Books Week 2025 – WTOP News

    Concerned residents joined the line outside the West End Neighborhood Library in D.C. on Sunday to pick up a banned book.

    For Mary Jane Webb, the Banned Wagon’s visit was just another opportunity to learn more about a topic she’s been passionate about for a while.
    (WTOP/Grace Newton)

    WTOP/Grace Newton

    Penguin Random House’s Banned Wagon tour
    Penguin Random House’s Banned Wagon tour is officially underway.
    (WTOP/Grace Newton)

    WTOP/Grace Newton

    Penguin Random House’s Banned Wagon tour
    Penguin Random House chose 30 challenged titles to carry on The Banned Wagon for its third year on the road.
    (WTOP/Grace Newton)

    WTOP/Grace Newton

    Penguin Random House’s Banned Wagon tour
    According to the American Library Association’s book ban data, there were 821 attempts to censor library materials and services in 2024.
    (WTOP/Grace Newton)

    WTOP/Grace Newton

    A line formed outside the West End Neighborhood Library in D.C. on Sunday — and not because people were there to check out books.

    Instead, concerned residents joined the line, one by one, waiting for their turn to pick up a free copy of a banned book from Penguin Random House’s Banned Wagon. The orange truck, decorated with images of famous banned book titles and the words “Save Our Stories,” sat outside the library as volunteers handed out free copies of books.

    “In addition to the free banned books, there’s lots of resources on the table to learn more about either the books themselves or to engage in more activism for fighting against book bans,” said Alyssa Taylor, the director of brand marketing for Penguin Random House.

    According to the American Library Association’s book ban data, there were 821 attempts to censor library materials and services in 2024. In those cases, 2,452 unique titles were challenged — that’s the third-highest number of book challenges recorded since tracking began in 1990.

    Among the Top 10 Most Challenged Books of 2024 are titles featuring LGBTQ+ content, sexually explicit content, depictions of sexual assault and drug use.

    “We really believe in engaging with different viewpoints and perspectives, because we publish books from all different perspectives, people of all identities and backgrounds. And so it’s really important to us to be able to bring those books to the community, and be able to make sure that people have access to the books that they’re looking for,” said Maya Livingstone, director of brand communications and social impact for Penguin Random House.

    Penguin Random House chose 30 challenged titles to carry on its Banned Wagon tour for its third year on the road. “The Kite Runner,” “The 1619 Project,” “The Fault in Our Stars” and “The Handmaid’s Tale” are among the highlighted works.

    Harry Gruenspecht waited in line alongside his wife and two young children.

    “Being able to learn about the world as it actually is, and not some kind of sanitized version of the world is important to us,” Gruenspecht said.

    “As a kid, I was allowed to read anything I wanted to read. So I can’t imagine anything else for my kids.”

    For Mary Jane Webb, the Banned Wagon’s visit was just another opportunity to learn more about a topic she’s been passionate about for a while.

    For the second year, Webb is working on a project to display banned books in the library of her old school, Murch Elementary. She says students are often surprised by some of the titles they find in the display.

    “Kids can specifically look at those books and check them out and everything. And they’re really interested in it. And they’re like, ‘Oh my gosh, this book’s banned? Why is this one banned?’” Webb said.

    “(I want them to) know that it’s OK to read the books and that it’s not hurting them or changing, it’s not doing anything to them. It’s helping.”

    The Banned Wagon will be at Solid State Books on 600 H Street NE on Wednesday, Oct. 8 at 3 p.m.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Grace Newton

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  • Penguin To Publish ‘Classic’ Roald Dahl Books After Censorship Backlash

    Penguin To Publish ‘Classic’ Roald Dahl Books After Censorship Backlash

    Publisher Penguin Random House announced it will release a new collection of Roald Dahl’s children’s novels in their original form after it received criticism for cuts and rewrites removing language that may be offensive to some modern-day readers. What do you think?

    “See? You can please everyone.”

    Eva Freeman, Candle Scenter

    “I’m just disgusted that Roald Dahl has been silent on the matter.”

    Andre Ostkamp, Buffet Monitor

    “I still wish they kept out the parts aimed at me by name.”

    Keith Anolin, Ransom Adjuster

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  • Roald Dahl’s original books will kept in print, following editing backlash – National | Globalnews.ca

    Roald Dahl’s original books will kept in print, following editing backlash – National | Globalnews.ca

    Publisher Penguin Random House announced Friday it will publish “classic” unexpurgated versions of Roald Dahl’s children’s novels after it received criticism for cuts and rewrites that were intended to make the books suitable for modern readers.

    Along with the new editions, the company said 17 of Dahl’s books would be published in their original form later this year as The Roald Dahl Classic Collection so “readers will be free to choose which version of Dahl’s stories they prefer.”

    The move comes after criticism of scores of changes made to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and other much-loved classics for recent editions published under the company’s Puffin children’s label, in which passages relating to weight, mental health, gender and race were altered.

    Augustus Gloop, Charlie’s gluttonous antagonist in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory — originally published in 1964 — became “enormous” rather than “enormously fat.” In Witches, an “old hag” became an “old crow,” and a supernatural female posing as an ordinary woman may be a “top scientist or running a business” instead of a “cashier in a supermarket or typing letters for a businessman.”

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    FILE – Books by Roald Dahl are displayed at the Barney’s store on East 60th Street in New York on Monday, Nov. 21, 2011. Critics are accusing the publisher of Roald Dahl’s classic children’s books of censorship after it removed colorful language from stories such as “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” and “Matilda” to make them more acceptable to modern readers.


    Andrew Burton / The Associated Press

    In Fantastic Mr. Fox, the word “black” was removed from a description of the “murderous, brutal-looking” tractors.

    The Roald Dahl Story Company, which controls the rights to the books, said it had worked with Puffin to review and revise the texts because it wanted to ensure that “Dahl’s wonderful stories and characters continue to be enjoyed by all children today.”

    While tweaking old books for modern sensibilities is not a new phenomenon in publishing, the scale of the edits drew strong criticism from free-speech groups such as writers’ organization PEN America, and from authors including Salman Rushdie.

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    Rushdie, who lived under threat of death from Iran’s Islamic regime for years because of the alleged blasphemy of his novel The Satanic Verses, called the revisions “absurd censorship.”

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    Rushdie, who was attacked and seriously injured last year at an event in New York state, tweeted news of Penguin’s change of heart on Friday with the words “Penguin Books back down after Roald Dahl backlash!”

    PEN America chief executive Suzanne Nossel wrote on Twitter: “I applaud Penguin for hearing out critics, taking the time to rethink this, and coming to the right place.”

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    Camilla, Britain’s queen consort, appeared to offer her view at a literary reception on Thursday. She urged writers to “remain true to your calling, unimpeded by those who may wish to curb the freedom of your expression or impose limits on your imagination.”

    Dahl’s books, with their mischievous children, strange beasts and often beastly adults, have sold more than 300 million copies and continue to be read by children around the world. Their multiple stage and screen adaptations include Matilda the Musical and two Willy Wonka films based on Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, with a third in the works.


    Gene Wilder as Willy Wonka on set of the 1971 film ‘Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory,’ based on the novel by Roald Dahl.


    Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images

    But Dahl, who died in 1990, is also a controversial figure because of antisemitic comments made throughout his life. His family apologized in 2020.

    In 2021, Dahl’s estate sold the rights to the books to Netflix, which plans to produce a new generation of films based on the stories.

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    Francesca Dow, managing director of Penguin Random House Children’s, said the publisher had “listened to the debate over the past week which has reaffirmed the extraordinary power of Roald Dahl’s books and the very real questions around how stories from another era can be kept relevant for each new generation.”

    “Roald Dahl’s fantastic books are often the first stories young children will read independently, and taking care for the imaginations and fast-developing minds of young readers is both a privilege and a responsibility,” she said.

    “We also recognize the importance of keeping Dahl’s classic texts in print,” Dow said. “By making both Puffin and Penguin versions available, we are offering readers the choice to decide how they experience Roald Dahl’s magical, marvelous stories.”

    &copy 2023 The Canadian Press

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  • With Penguin Random House Out of the Picture, What Happens to Simon & Schuster Now?

    With Penguin Random House Out of the Picture, What Happens to Simon & Schuster Now?

    Simon & Schuster has plenty to be thankful for this Thanksgiving. New books from Bob Dylan and Mike Pence have been lighting up the best-seller lists, as has Jennette McCurdy’s I’m Glad My Mom Died, now enjoying its 14th week in the upper echelons of The New York Times’ top nonfiction releases. That’s to say nothing of Colleen Hoover, the TikTok-propelled book-sales behemoth who has helped make S&S, as one veteran publishing source put it, “by far the most profitable company in the industry.” Hoover’s new novel, It Starts With Us, dropped on October 18, immediately becoming, in the words of CEO Jonathan Karp, a “worldwide publishing phenomenon and #1 bestseller in all of Simon & Schuster’s international territories.” At the time of this writing, it was number one in most-sold fiction on Amazon and number one on the Times’ best-seller list for combined print and e-book fiction, with Hoover continuing to hold the top five slots for paperback trade fiction.

    And yet, despite these successes, and regardless of its market strength—which will no doubt get an extra jolt from the holiday shopping season—S&S is closing out 2022 amid a cloud of uncertainty. Just about two weeks after Hoover’s latest bestseller hit shelves, a federal judge sided with the Department of Justice in its lawsuit to stop the company’s acquisition by America’s largest book publisher, Penguin Random House, a deal that would have turned the nation’s Big Five publishing houses into the Big Four, giving PRH a 49% share of the marketplace. The ruling slammed the brakes on a combo that would have further consolidated the book world, while also demonstrating how the Biden administration isn’t messing around when it comes to antitrust enforcement. “PRH’s acquisition of S&S,” wrote Judge Florence Pan in an 80-page decision issued on Halloween, “is likely to substantially lessen competition [for] ‘the publishing rights to anticipated top-selling books.’ … The government has presented a compelling case that predicts substantial harm to competition as a result of the proposed merger.”

    Any glimmer of hope that a successful appeal might be able to salvage the $2 billion merger evaporated late Monday afternoon, when an SEC filing landed from Simon & Schuster’s parent company, Paramount Global: “Paramount terminated the Purchase Agreement in accordance with its terms. Penguin Random House is obligated to pay a $200 million termination fee to Paramount.” PRH, owned by the German conglomerate Bertelsmann, followed with its own statement: “We did everything possible to complete the acquisition. We believe the judge’s ruling is wrong and planned to appeal the decision, confident we could make a compelling and persuasive argument to reverse the lower court ruling on appeal. However, we have to accept Paramount’s decision not to move forward.”

    Paramount’s termination of the purchase agreement raises the obvious question of where this leaves S&S, which has been grappling with its fate ever since it was put on the block more than two years ago. In a note to employees, Karp sought to allay anxieties: “This news is still fresh, and at this point I have no specific information to impart about what will happen in the coming months. You may read or hear rumors and speculation about our future, but you can be assured that I will keep you informed as soon as there is pertinent news I can share.”

    What now? In a nutshell, it’s back to the old drawing board for Paramount Global, which remains firm in its determination that S&S is a “non-core asset” and “therefore does not fit strategically within Paramount’s broader portfolio” of video-based assets—CBS, Showtime, the former Viacom networks, the Paramount+ streaming service, etc. Even before Pan’s decision came down, Bakish had privately reiterated that Paramount wasn’t having second thoughts about selling S&S, which I’m told will remain a “discontinued operation” in Paramount Global’s quarterly earnings calculations. With the holidays upon us, it will take a bit of time for the M&A process to really get going again. But the company does expect interest, as one source put it, from “a mix of strategic and financial buyers.”

    That’s the jargonistic way of saying there will presumably be interest from “other big publishing companies” and “private equity.” Let’s begin with the latter. It would be a scenario akin to, say, Elliott Management’s 2019 acquisition of Barnes & Noble, which, it’s worth noting, hardly seems like a disaster thus far. Nevertheless, the words private equity are enough to send shivers down the spine of any editorially minded person. PRH argued at trial that if the sale didn’t go through, Paramount might sell to a firm with little publishing knowledge, which would take on debt and “gut” S&S. The judge was unmoved. “Those arguments are not relevant to the Court’s analysis of the government’s claim,” Pan wrote in her decision, noting that “the expressed concerns about a private-equity acquisition are highly speculative.” Who might such an acquirer be, in any case? The Wall Street Journal has reported there’s been interest from KKR, which, as one of my sources noted, could potentially find synergies between S&S and the audiobook business that KKR acquired in 2018, RBmedia.

    As for so-called strategic buyers, those would be Hachette and HarperCollins, whose executives testified during the trial that they’d still like their companies to own S&S. (Both were outbid the first time around.) Each company is smaller than PRH and therefore arguably not as much of a threat to competition. (“What’s the threshold?” one source wondered.) But there’s no guarantee that the DOJ wouldn’t also seek to prevent an S&S-Hachette or an S&S-HarperCollins mash-up. In either scenario, the Big Five would still become the Big Four, and the Biden administration has strongly signaled that it wants less consolidation, not more. All of which is to say that none of Simon & Schuster’s options seem particularly rosy or cut and dried.

    Whatever the future holds, S&S executives will have plenty to toast when they host the company’s holiday party next month. Profits were up 29% year over year for the first nine months of 2022, and sales revenue rose 10% during the third quarter. During the first quarter of the year, Simon & Schuster’s total revenue was up 17%, to $217 million, while operating income rose to $50 million, an 85% increase. In his note to staff on Monday, Karp sounded a note of optimism. “Simon & Schuster has never been more profitable and valuable than it is today,” he wrote. “We’ll be starting the new year with some tremendously exciting, sure-to-be-bestselling titles, which will be buttressed by the sales of what is currently the best-selling backlist in the publishing industry. As I have noted before, we will be celebrating our 100th anniversary in April of 2024, regardless of who our owner is—and we will have much to celebrate.”

    Joe Pompeo

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  • Dr. Tasha Eurich, Leon Logothetis & Dov Baron on Moments With Marianne Radio Show

    Dr. Tasha Eurich, Leon Logothetis & Dov Baron on Moments With Marianne Radio Show

    Press Release



    updated: Jun 12, 2017

    Tune in the month of June for an array of inspiring shows on Moments with Marianne radio show. Moments with Marianne is heard on WMEX 1510AM & Dreamvisions 7 Radio Network. To see the entire show listing, visit www.MomentsWithMarianne.com.

    Insight: Why We’re Not as Self-Aware as We Think with Dr. Tasha Eurich
    Saturday, June 17th at 10 a.m. & 10 p.m. EST

    Dr. Tasha Eurich is an organizational psychologist, researcher, and New York Times best-selling author. She’s built a reputation as a fresh, modern voice in the business world by pairing her scientific grounding in human behavior with a pragmatic approach to solving problems. Over her 15-plus-year career, she’s helped thousands of professionals — from Fortune 500 executives to early stage entrepreneurs— improve their self-awareness and success.

    With a Ph.D. in Industrial-Organizational Psychology from Colorado State University and BAs in Theater and Psychology from Middlebury College, Tasha is the principal of The Eurich Group, a boutique executive development firm that helps companies — from start-ups to the Fortune 100 — succeed by improving the effectiveness of their leaders and teams.

    She has contributed to the Huffington Post, Entrepreneur Magazine, and CNBC, and her work has been featured in Forbes, Fox Business, and Fast Company, as well as peer-reviewed journals. She has been named a “Top 100 Thought Leader” by Trust Across America, a “Leader to Watch” by the American Management Association, and one of Denver Business Journal’s “40 Under 40.”

    Tasha’s first book, Bankable Leadership, debuted on the New York Times bestseller list in 2013 and has since become a popular resource for managers and executives who don’t want to choose between making their employees happy and producing bottom-line results for their business. Her second book, INSIGHT, delves into the connection between our self-awareness — what she calls the meta-skill of the twenty-first century — and our performance and success, both in and out of the workplace. Fortune calls it a “sprawling exploration of the psychic frailty that leads to self-delusion and self-aggrandizement, and — importantly — a compassionate, helpful guide for avoiding that path (or reversing it).” Her TEDx talk has been viewed more than a million times. For more information, visit http://www.insight-book.com.

    The Kindness Diaries with Leon Logothetis
    Saturday, June 17th at 10 a.m. & 10 p.m. EST

    Leon Logothetis is a global adventurer, motivational speaker and philanthropist. It wasn’t always that way. He used to be a broker in the city of London where he felt uninspired and chronically depressed. He gave it all up for a life on the road. This radical life change was inspired by the inspirational movie “The Motorcycle Diaries”. Leon has visited more than 90 countries and traveled to every continent.

    His show “The Kindness Diaries” is streaming on Netflix! Leon’s books, “Amazing Adventures of a Nobody” and “The Kindness Diaries are in stores now. His new book “Live, Love, Explore: Discover the Way of the Traveler a Roadmap to the Life You Were Meant to Live,” published by Readers Digest. For more on Leon, visit http://www.leonlogothetis.com.

    Fiercely Loyal with Dov Baron on Friday, June 30th at 5 a.m. & 5 p.m. EST

    One of Inc. Magazine’s Top 100 Leadership Speaker to hire, Dov Baron is an international leadership catalyst. He is the leading authority on Authentic Leadership, and Leadership Succession, or as he prefers to call it, “Full Monty Leadership.” The world’s only Corporate Cultural Momentum Strategist, Dov works with leaders and executive teams to build the bonds that create corporate cultures that become Fiercely Loyal.

    Dov is a bestselling author of several books. His latest book is “Fiercely Loyal: How High Performing Companies Develop and Retain Top Talent.” He also writes for and has been featured in many industry magazines including CNN, CBS Small Business Pulse, SHRM, Yahoo Finance, Boston Globe, Business in Vancouver, USA today, CEO, Entrepreneur and many more. For more on Dov, visit http://fullmontyleadership.com.

    Not in the Boston area? Click here to listen to the show live: http://rdo.to/DREAM7.

    To learn more about Marianne Pestana or the Moments with Marianne radio show, visit www.MomentsWithMarianne.com.

    Source: Marianne Pestana LLC

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  • Judith Orloff M.D., Kyle McMahon & Eden Collinsworth on Moments with Marianne Radio Show

    Judith Orloff M.D., Kyle McMahon & Eden Collinsworth on Moments with Marianne Radio Show

    Press Release



    updated: May 14, 2017

    Tune in on Sunday, May 14th at 8pm EST and Saturday, May 20th at 10am & 10pm EST for a soul inspiring interviews on the Moments with Marianne radio show, with host Marianne Pestana as she talks with Judith Orloff MD about her new book, The Empath’s Survival Guide: Life Strategies for Sensitive People, followed by Kyle McMahon a Warner recording artist and four-time guest on Oprah’s Lifeclass about The Power of Telling Your Story, followed by an insightful interview with Eden Collinsworth, VP at Hearst Corportation about her new book Behaving Badly: The New Morality in Politics, Sex and Business

    Moments with Marianne is heard at Dreamvisions 7 Radio Network & WMEX 1510AM Boston. Not in the Boston area?  Click here to listen LIVE at 8pm EST: http://rdo.to/WMEX

    “Dr. Orloff shows that intuition can help us lead smarter, saner lives. She is a serene maverick.”

    The Empath’s Survival Guide with Judith Orloff, M.D. 

    Transforming the face of psychiatry, Judith Orloff MD asserts that we are keepers of an innate intuitive intelligence so perceptive that it can tell us how to heal — and prevent — illness. Yet intuition and spirituality are the very aspects of our wisdom usually disenfranchised from traditional health care.

    Dr. Orloff is accomplishing for psychiatry what physicians like Dean Ornish and Mehmet Oz have done for mainstream medicine — she is proving that the links between physical, emotional, and spiritual health can’t be ignored. Dr. Orloff is a New York Times bestselling author and is on the UCLA psychiatric clinical faculty. She specializes in treating empaths and sensitive people in her Los Angeles-based private practice. She has spoken at medical schools, hospitals, the American Psychiatric Association, Fortune Magazine’s Most Powerful Women Summit, and alternative and traditional health forums — venues where she presents practical intuitive tools to doctors, patients, and everyday people. In response to her work, The Los Angeles Times calls Dr. Orloff “a prominent energy-based healer”.

    Judith Orloff, M.D. created The Empath’s Survival Guide (SoundsTrue 2017) as a practical, empowering book for everyone who wants to develop their sensitivities and empathy to become more caring people in an often insensitive world. Whether you’re a highly sensitive person, or an empath who absorbs other people’s stress, or simply someone who wants to live a more open-hearted life without burning out or experiencing compassion fatigue—this book is for you. It’s also for the loved ones of sensitive people who want to become more supportive of them. Sensitivity is a great gift that needs to be honored and developed.

    Dr. Orloff’s work has been featured in O Magazine, Forbes, Newsweek, USA Today, the Wall Street Journal, Self, Cosmo, The Washington Times, Teen Vogue, Scientific American, and the New York Post. She has appeared on The Today Show, The Dr. Oz Show, CBS Early Show, CNN, PBS, BBC5, and NPR. Dr. Orloff is also an  Elephant Journal, Huffington Post, and Psychology Today. http://www.drjudithorloff.com 

    The Power of Telling Your Story with Kyle McMahon

    Kyle McMahon is an active media millennial. As 111/Warner recording artist K.Mac (Kyle Mac) he is currently working on his debut SchizoSONIC which features such superstar collaborators as Monte Pittman (Madonna, Adam Lambert, Prong), Alex G (Justin Timberlake), The Passengerz (Madonna , Seal, Cher) and The Underground (Justin Timberlake, LFO). His first music video “A Letter 2 My Younger Self (Fatherless Sons)” hit 100,000 views in its first month.

    As a four-time guest on the Emmy-winning Oprah’s Lifeclass, Kyle has become the face of fatherless sons. Through his work with fatherless sons issues, he joined with NBC‘s Veronica De La Cruz and Everclear‘s Art Alexakis to create the Stand Up Man Up Campaign spawned from And Then There Were Two, a non-profit promoting responsible fatherhood. http://www.kylemcmahon.me

    Behaving Badly: The New Morality in Politics, Sex and Business with Eden Collinsworth

    Eden Collinsworth is a former media executive and business consultant. She was president of Arbor House Publishing Co. and founder of the Los Angeles-based monthly lifestyle magazine, BUZZ, before becoming a vice president at Hearst Corporation. She served as the chief operating officer and chief-of-staff at the EastWest Institute, a global think tank.

    After writing a bestselling book in China for Chinese businessmen on Western deportment, she launched Collinsworth & Associates, a Beijing-based consulting company, which specialized in intercultural communication.  

    What is the relevance of morality today? Addressing this question in Behaving Badly with self-effacing wit and unremitting resourcefulness, Eden Collinsworth enlists the famous, the infamous, and the heretofore unheard-of to unravel how we make moral choices in an increasingly complex—and ethically flexible—age. http://www.edencollinsworth.com

    For more show information or to learn more about Moments with Marianne visit www.MomentswithMarianne.com 

    Source: Marianne Pestana LLC

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