Inappropriate Books in School Libraries
Protect Your Children
What’s the Concern?
School libraries are quietly introducing students to gender ideology, sexual identity activism, and medically-controversial ideas—without parental consent.
- Many books in our K-12 libraries now promote transgender, non-binary, or queer identity narratives as settled truth.
- These books often present irreversible medical interventions (like hormones or surgeries) as solutions for gender confusion, without discussing long-term consequences or alternate views.
- Some include graphic sexual content, adult terminology, or instructional-style explanations of sexual acts, all marketed under the banner of “inclusivity.”
⚠️ The issue isn’t diversity—it’s developmental appropriateness and medical accuracy.
These books are not being challenged for having lesbian or gay characters—they’re being challenged for graphic sexual detail, trans/queer messaging, and targeting vulnerable, developing students.
“Parents aren’t asking for censorship. They’re asking for age-appropriate materials, honesty about what’s being presented, and the right to protect their children from confusion—not to mention explicit content.”
– Tina Descovich, co-founder of Moms for Liberty
Why This Matters
- Children are in a formative stage where identity, biology, and belief are still developing.
- Parents have a right to know when material contradicts their family’s moral or medical values.
Examples of Books Raising Concern
Book Title
Age Group
Concerns
Gender Queer by Maia Kobabe
High School
Graphic sexual illustrations, presentation of gender identity as fluid and binary-oppressive
Flamer by Mike Curato
High School
Sexualized themes, confusion about identity, profanity, bullying language
Beyond Magenta by Susan Kuklin
Middle/High
Personal stories of gender transition, includes hormone use and surgeries without full medical balance
Why Gender Ideology Is Not “Just Diversity”
- Promotes irreversible medical decisions as empowerment, even for minors.
- Encourages secrecy from parents (e.g., “you don’t have to tell your family”).
- Dismisses or vilifies traditional views on gender, sex, and identity.
What Parents Can Do
Parents have a right and a responsibility to act.
- Find out what books are in your school’s library by clicking below the carousel and searching on your child’s school.
- Request a content review of any titles with age-inappropriate or medically misleading material.
- Bring concerns to your school board or principal—many are unaware of what’s in the collection.
- Advocate for parental oversight policies for controversial library content.
- Support legislation requiring transparency and review of sexually explicit or ideological books.
Know the Difference
We’re Not Against…
We’re Concerned About…
Lesbian, Gay students as people
Respecting every child
Age-appropriate awareness
Graphic, sexual, and ideological content
Promoting medical transitions to minors
Adult-themed content marketed to children
Contact your county school board and county supervisor, and your state delegate and senator to voice your concerns.













