Banned books in Florida schools
24 titles reported as removed, restricted, or formally challenged by at least one Floridaschool district. This is a state-aggregated view; the specific district and policy vary per title. See each book’s page for its full citation history.
Sources: PEN America’s Index of School Book Bans and the ALA most-challenged list. Florida Department of Education: www.fldoe.org.
BelovedToni Morrison · 870L
I Know Why the Caged Bird SingsMaya Angelou · 1070L
Maus: A Survivor's TaleArt Spiegelman
MonsterWalter Dean Myers · 670L
New KidJerry Craft
Of Mice and MenJohn Steinbeck · 630L
Slaughterhouse-FiveKurt Vonnegut · 850L
SpeakLaurie Halse Anderson · 690L
Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and YouJason Reynolds and Ibram X. Kendi · 1000L
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time IndianSherman Alexie · 600L
The Bluest EyeToni Morrison · 920L
The Catcher in the RyeJ.D. Salinger · 790L
The Color PurpleAlice Walker · 670L
The Diary of a Young GirlAnne Frank · 1080L
The GiverLois Lowry · 760L
The Grapes of WrathJohn Steinbeck · 680L
The Graveyard BookNeil Gaiman · 820L
The Hate U GiveAngie Thomas · 590L
The House on Mango StreetSandra Cisneros · 870L
The Hunger GamesSuzanne Collins · 810L
The Kite RunnerKhaled Hosseini · 840L
The Perks of Being a WallflowerStephen Chbosky · 720L
The Poet XElizabeth Acevedo · 800L
To Kill a MockingbirdHarper Lee · 870L
How book challenges work in Florida
Florida has 24 titles on file as banned, restricted, or formally challenged by at least one Florida public-school district in the public sources ReadingList aggregates from (PEN America's Index of School Book Bans and the American Library Association's Office for Intellectual Freedom most-challenged list). These tracked numbers represent FORMAL challenges that reached district board minutes, ALA OIF reporting, or PEN America's quarterly index — quieter classroom-level removals that never reached those national trackers are not captured here, so the actual scope of restriction in Florida is plausibly larger than this list reflects.
Book challenges in Florida typically follow a layered process: a parent, board member, or community member files a written request for reconsideration of an assigned title with a specific school or district; the district convenes a review committee (usually comprising teachers, librarians, administrators, and sometimes parent representatives); the committee reads the book, evaluates it against the district's selection criteria and against Florida ELA standards, holds at least one public comment session, and votes to retain, restrict (e.g., grade-level limits or parental consent), or remove the title from the approved curriculum. Decisions are typically appealable to the state board of education within a defined window.
Common challenge bases across the 24 Florida titles tracked here mirror the national pattern: sexual content (most common), LGBTQ+ themes, race and racism, profanity or violence, religion and political content, and depictions of substance abuse. Tracked titles include: Beloved; I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings; Maus: A Survivor's Tale. Each title's detail page lists the specific Florida district that initiated the challenge, the date, and (when published) the formal challenge basis recorded in district minutes. For deeper context on national patterns, the linked PEN America and ALA pages publish quarterly and annual reports.
For parents, teachers, librarians, and students in Florida navigating this landscape: the practical paths forward depend on role. Parents who object to a specific assigned title can typically request an alternative assignment from the teacher directly without initiating a formal challenge — most Florida districts have informal opt-out paths well before the formal reconsideration process kicks in. Librarians and teachers facing pressure to remove a title can document the formal selection criteria the book met, gather student-reader testimonials (with FERPA-compliant consent), and align with the National Coalition Against Censorship for advisory support. Students directly affected by a book removal can speak at the school board meeting where the decision is reviewed — public comment is open to all Florida district residents. Florida's Department of Education publishes the formal procedural framework — the source link is in the sources block above.