It doesn't take long to read the most banned book in America, an award-winning memoir in graphic novel form called "Gender Queer" by Maia Kobabe. It's about the illustrator's yearslong quest to unravel what it means to be gender nonbinary — that is, to feel neither female nor male.
It takes even less time to understand why parents and PTAs around the country have pounced on the book, demanding it be disappeared from school libraries.
First published in 2019, "Gender Queer" covers topics guaranteed to be explosive in certain quarters: confusion about gender and sexual identity, unsettling sexual encounters, sexual fantasies, masturbation, menstrual blood. And of course, pronouns.
The criticism has been ferocious.
"This is pornography!" wrote one reviewer on Amazon. "The images and language in this book have no place on a bookshelf or anywhere near children, which is the target audience for this book. It shows oral sex, homosexual sex, etc. Please do not think this is teaching material. It is intended for grooming."
The pernicious misuse of the word "grooming" aside, this memoir is explicit in places.
There are images of what some might consider kinky sexual behavior between Kobabe and a person she meets online. Of used menstrual pads. Of a bloody speculum after Kobabe's first terrifying experience in the doctor's office.
To be sure, this is not a book for little kids.