A Texas school district has pulled dozens of challenged books from its library shelves—including the Bible—just before the start of the academic year under a new policy introduced by conservative leaders. “Attached is a list of all books that were challenged last year.

By the end of today, I need all books pulled from the library and classrooms,” Keller Independent School District executive curriculum director Jennifer Price instructed principals in an email Tuesday, obtained by The Texas Tribune. “Once this has been completed, please email me a confirmation. We need to ensure this action is taken by the end of today.”

The books were snatched up due to a new compliance policy the school district’s board adopted Aug. 8, local outlet WFAA Dallas reported. According to The Dallas Morning News, Keller spokesperson Bryce Nieman said that the new policy requires every once-challenged book to go through a review process.


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Keller associate Superintendent John Allison said each book would be returned to its respective library if it’s found to be in compliance with district guidelines. However, officials say they don’t know how long the process may take.

Forty-two books in total—including the Bible, a graphic novel adaptation of The Diary of Anne Frank, The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison, and Gender Queer: A Memoir by Maia Kobabe—were swiped from school shelves despite some of them previously being approved by officials to stay in circulation.

According to the district’s list of challenged books, a parent raised concern in Nov. 2021 over “any variation” of the Bible written by “men who lived a long time ago.” The parent withdrew their challenge in December. However, another parent challenged the Bible in Feb. 2022. After the board reviewed it, members initially found that it would remain at its current library location.

Anne Frank’s Diary: The Graphic Adaptation, reworked by Ari Folman and illustrated by David Polonsky, was challenged by a parent in Feb. 2022, but the board also initially decided that it would remain at its current location. Both books were pulled Tuesday for reconsideration due to the district’s new policies. READ MORE