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Graphic sexual content in winning children’s book defended by chief judge

July 3, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Detailed descriptions of sex acts, coarse language and scenes of drug-taking are at the heart of why a novel was voted the best children’s book of the year, the award’s head judge says.

Ted Dawe’s Into the River won the top honour at the annual New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards.

However, its racy content has led one bookstore to refuse to stock it, and award organisers are sending “explicit content” stickers to all booksellers to warn potential buyers.

The book uses expletives including the c-word and depicts drug use and sex scenes, including one where a baby mimics the sounds of intercourse.

The chief judge of the awards, author Bernard Beckett, said Into the River was in the young adult category, for ages 14 to 18, and was aimed at those aged 15 and older.

The content that had offended some needed to be taken in context, he said….

Bob McCoskrie, of lobby group Family First, claimed the author and judges were out to “pollute the moral innocence of kids”.

“I think every New Zealand parent would be saying, ‘What were the judges thinking?’ This is an adult book that even adults would find offensive.”

For full story see:

Otago Daily Times

Graphic content in winning children’s book defended

http://www.odt.co.nz/entertainment/books/263125/graphic-content-winning-childrens-book-defended

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Filed Under: Moral Values Tagged With: Bernard Beckett, explicit content, Family First, Into the River, NZ Post Children's Book Awards, Ted Dawe, young adult category

NZ Post Judges and author “are out to pollute the moral innocence of kids” says Family First NZ

July 2, 2013 by SPCS 1 Comment

Family First NZ, a registered charity, has issued a media release calling on NZ Post to withdraw an award from a children’s book author

30 June 2013

Call for NZ Post To Withdraw Award From Book

Family First is calling on NZ Post to withdraw their support and the award from Ted Dawe’s Into the River book which won top prize in the annual New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards

“This is an offensive and sexually explicit book which is completely inappropriate for young people, will be shocking to most New Zealand parents, and shows that the judges of the Awards have completely lost the plot,” says Bob McCoskrie, National Director of Family First NZ.

“We were shocked to see the graphic sexual nature of the book and the foul language, and horrified to know that it is now an ‘award-winning’ book being stocked in school libraries and targeted at young people.”

“I think every New Zealand parent would be saying ‘what were the judges thinking?’. We would also question the wisdom of the School Library Association for thinking that it might be appropriate. This is an adult book that even adults would find offensive. What other books does the Association think appropriate but parents wouldn’t?” says Mr McCoskrie.

“It appears that the author and also the judges are out to pollute the moral innocence of kids.”

Family First is calling on New Zealand Post to withdraw the award, and to avoid association with the Awards until the judges show better judgement.

END

Family First website

www.familyfirst.org.nz

Also see: Into the River wins top prize at NZ Post book awards

Published: 8:36PM Monday June 24, 2013 Source: ONE News

http://tvnz.co.nz/entertainment-news/into-river-wins-top-prize-nz-post-book-awards-5475178

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Filed Under: Moral Values Tagged With: Into the River, New Post Children's Book Awards, NZ Post Children's Book Awards, Ted Dawe

Book prize lets down the young – Opinion (Herald on Sunday)

July 2, 2013 by SPCS Leave a Comment

Children are exposed to a great deal of explicit sexual material these days. As they come through puberty and beyond, they are liable to come across so much of it on the internet that those who would like to bring a better influence to bear might despair.

They should not give up. There are more weapons in the fight than heavy-handed bans and censorship that never worked, even before pornography was as pervasive as it is now. The best weapon is a book.

Good, well-written stories that go to the heart of a reader and touch the truth of any human experience, including sex, can help a young mind rise above smut. That is why it is a worry when a national award for children’s books is given to a novel that needs to carry a warning.

Some booksellers, we report today, are refusing to display Into the River by Ted Dawe, which took top prize in the recent New Zealand Post Children’s Book Awards. One explained that it was “unnecessarily graphic” and contained themes the bookseller considered inappropriate for young teenagers.

It contains obscenities and shock references that worthwhile literature does not need. We can only wonder what the judges were thinking, or how much worse the other entries could have been.

Nobody has to wonder at the embarrassment of the award organisers. Last week they sent out parental warning stickers to shops stocking the book, advising them to put it on its covers. The 2013 Kiwi Kids Good Book Guide lists it for children aged 13 and over but one national booksellers’ chain has told all its managers to mark it for over-15s.

Schools, though, seem to think it fine. The School Library Association welcomes the book as a reflection of our society, evidently because its central character is a young male Maori. “There is so little out there with this type of protagonist,” says the president, Fiona Mackie. “When you as library staff see that sort of book, you grab it.”

It is often remarked that New Zealand fiction written for film and television is oddly and uncharacteristically dark. There is not much that is bright, stylish or subtle in its treatment of most subjects, especially sex.

That is probably a reflection of the immaturity and limitations of screen writers in a small nation’s talent pool, but our literature has been better than that. And our writing for children has been exceptionally good. Novelists should not let the crude depictions of New Zealand on air wash back into its literature, particularly when writing for the young.

Teachers and school librarians do teenagers a disservice when they point them towards books that need to shock to capture their interest. Teenagers are not shocked by the subject matter, of course. They can see worse without going to much trouble.

What might shock them is that teachers and librarians have put this stuff in front of them. Teenagers would never say so, but they do not want this sort of fare from their school any more than they would want it from their parents.

It is not prudish or patronising to maintain a certain standard, it is re-assuring them that quality exists and people they respect can recognise it. For many, their early teenage years might be the last in their lives when they read literature worthy of the name.

Reading it might not be easy but it can reward the effort with pleasure far exceeding anything that needs an age warning. The only warning that Dawe’s material really needs is that reading it almost certainly will be a waste of time.

Source: – Herald on Sunday

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/opinion/news/article.cfm?c_id=466&objectid=10893783

Also see:

Winners announced for New Zealand Post Children’s Book Award

Tuesday, 25 June 2013, 9:39 am

Press Release: NZ Post Children’s Book Awards

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/CU1306/S00341/winners-announced-for-new-zealand-post-childrens-book-award.htm

Into the River named top read at awards. 24 June 2013.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/southland-times/culture/8837884/Into-the-River-named-top-read-at-awards

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Filed Under: Moral Values, Obscenity Tagged With: Into the River, NZ Post Children's Book Awards, Ted Dawe

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