Amidst Lawsuit, Utah Bans Its 23rd Book from All Public Schools

⚓ Books    📅 2026-02-17    👤 surdeus    👁️ 1      

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Earlier this month, the Maya Angelou estate joined in a lawsuit filed against the state of Utah’s book banning law. The suit challenges the legality of Utah’s “sensitive materials” law, which had at that point banned 22 books from every public school in the state.

Last week on Friday the 13, Utah added its 23rd title to the list: Stephen King’s Bag of Bones.

This new ban continues to keep Utah at the top of states with the most banned books, beating out South Carolina’s 21 bans.

Utah passed one of the strictest bills related to books in public schools in 2024. House Bill 29 (HB 29) allows parents to challenge books they deem “sensitive material” and it also outright bans books from all public schools in the state if those books have been deemed “objective sensitive material” or “pornographic” per state code in at least three public school districts or two public school districts and five charter schools statewide. The bill went into effect July 1, 2024, and it started with 13 titles on it.

full updated list of books banned by the state of Utah.

The bill is retroactive, meaning that titles which met the state’s guidelines prior to the bill’s start date were included on the list. Per HB 29, any time a public or charter school removes a book deemed “sensitive material,” they must notify the State Board of Education. If that book meets the threshold of removals, all schools will be notified and expected to dispose of it.

There are now 23 books prohibited in any Utah public school. Of them, 16 are written by women, and their average publication date is 2009. This means that most of these books have been on shelves and available for many years and caused no issues until this manufactured crisis. The list is as follows:

What is important to understand about the law is that despite claims this is about “local control,” schools in the state are forced to follow the decisions made in other districts. There are 42 public school districts in Utah, but two districts account for nearly 80% of the books banned statewide: Davis School District and Washington School District.

Bag of Bones was banned in Davis, though it was not banned in Washington. The other three districts in which King’s book was banned include Toole, Jordan, and Granite–the first time that district has contributed to a statewide ban.

We’re going to continue to see more books added to this list in Utah as the school year carries on. These are not, of course, the only books being banned in the state where book bans are happening, despite claims by the federal Department of Education. Individual school districts are allowed to ban any books they deem inappropriate–which, of course, helps add more titles to the state list as only three districts need to remove a book before the book must be removed everywhere.

Utah is not the only state with such a book list. South Carolina also retains a sanctioned list of books that must be removed in every public school district. Their list contains 21 titles, making them the most censorious state when it comes to state-sanctioned book bans. There is a pending lawsuit in that state as well, brought by the ACLU on behalf of the South Carolina Association of School Librarians and three public school students under the age of 18.

Tennessee has the legal mechanisms for creating statewide school book bans as well, though it has yet to add any titles to a list–in that state, the Secretary of State has instead targeted public libraries. And though there is no law in the state that permits creation of a state-sanctioned banned list, Florida officials have also distributed a list of books the state deems inappropriate and necessary to be removed from school libraries anyway.

None of these laws apply to private or homeschool institutions. That’s intentional.

Book bans in Utah are coming in waves, so anticipate more titles to be added to the list in the coming weeks. The state is working its way backwards from the date of the law’s implementation–so chances are as we see more books being banned here, they’ll continue to be older and older titles. Clearly, the lawsuit filed against HB 29 isn’t deterring the most important work in the state education system: removing books that have been on shelves for decades.

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