
New Hampshire Prisons Ban Books Critical of Prison System, Award Winners
In stories that seem to be unfolding rapidly in recent months, New Hampshire joins the ranks of several other states, including Arizona, to ban books that are critical of the justice and prison systems.
The Human Rights Defense Center (HRDC), a nonprofit which advocates on behalf of those held in correctional facilities throughout the US, recently acquired a list of specific titles and their associated violations for those incarcerated in New Hampshire.
According to the mail policies and procedures as outlined by the state prison system, the following printed materials (i.e., books) are in violation of policy and subject to rejection:

- Obscene material, as determined by the LRC, the Commissioner, or a court of law, and including publications containing explicit descriptions, advertisements or pictorial representations of sexual acts involving penetration, bestiality, bondage, sadomasochism, or sex involving children and including, but not limited to material that violates RSA 650:1, will not be permitted.
- Sexually explicit and/or offensive material that would be detrimental to treatment of inmates or that would encourage or educate inmates in deviant or unlawful sexual practices as determined by the sex offender treatment clinical staff will not be permitted.
- Nudity or sexual depictions that violate no other provisions of this policy and/or which have scholarly, medical or purely artistic value may be admitted.
- The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold for being “sexually explicit & offensive.”
- Blood in the Water by Heather Ann Thomas for being “security concerns-encourage group disruption” — this is a Pulitzer-prize winning book about the Attica uprising. The author sued the Illinois Department of Corrections last fall for banning the title.
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