The US Bureau of Prisons has been considering removing all books concerning religion that do not fall onto pre-approved lists from their libraries. Critics of the plan, from both right and left sides of the country are speaking out to try to stop the decision. The Republican Study Committee released this statement: "We must ensure that in America the federal government is not the undue arbiter of what may or may not be read by our citizens.”The NYTimes article (linked above) on the subject contains links to each religion and their approved reading lists. it's an interesting thing to see. The Philokalia is on the list, which I'm sure makes for common prison reading. Also, "A Muslim Girl's Guide to Life's Big Changes" gets to stay. Huh. Siad one inmate, "I’ve seen the list of approved books, and 99 percent of them, we never had to begin with."
What do you all think about this? Should we take books that might incite violence in people out of the hands' of prisoners? It seems like a hard thing to justify.

The Man Booker shortlist of six was announced today at a press conference at Man Group plc in London. Following the meeting, Howard Davies, Chair of Judges commented: “Selecting a shortlist this year from what was widely seen as an exciting longlist was a tough challenge. We hope the choices we have made after passionate and careful consideration, will attract wide interest.” Isn't that what they said last year, and the year before that? Ah, well. The novels are (drumroll please!):