Prison Banned Books Week Toolkit

Prison Banned Books Week Toolkit

Thank you for joining forces with PEN America during our inaugural Prison Banned Books Week (October 25th-31st). Together, we’ll help people understand that prisons are the largest censors in the US and provide ways to participate in our advocacy campaign targeting state leaders and prison officials.

In this toolkit, you’ll find elements to take part in and amplify awareness and actions.

PEN America released Reading Between the Bars: An In-Depth Look at Prison Censorship on Wednesday, October 25, 2023. The report’s main findings are:

  • In 2023, PEN America found 84 percent of prisons now require that books are purchased from vendors the state or specific prisons opaquely select without publishing criteria for their choices or providing steps for booksellers to become approved.
  • PEN America also found prisons are increasingly limiting the booksellers allowed to send books into prisons to a handful of “approved vendors.” This practice is a kind of content-neutral restriction, and has increased exponentially since 2015, when 30 percent of prisons wouldn’t allow books from nonprofits, independent bookstores, family and friends.
  • The scale of this censorship is widely unknown due to a lack of record keeping. Idaho uniquely keeps track of approved vendor censorship and, in the first year the policy was implemented, the state denied one book for every four incarcerated people.

Other major findings in the research revealed:

  • Approved vendor banning is on the rise and is outstripping content bans in limiting literature to incarcerated people.
  • The most common reason for content-based censorship is “sexually explicit” which in practice censors art, medical and drawing books among others.
  • A lack of documentation means that the true extent of carceral censorship is likely exponentially greater than the numbers featured in the report, which were found to be extremely high.

Social Media Campaign


Did you know Florida prisons ban over 22,000 books and incarcerated people in Missouri can’t get books as gifts? This #PrisonBannedBooksWeek, urge your legislators and DOC officials to stop prison censorship. #BooksNotBans


People inside are denied literature that discusses what it’s like to be incarcerated. Prison officials claim these books threaten security. #BooksNotBans


These books are denied because of “sexually explicit” images. Sexually explicit is the #1 reason for prisons to censor content. But, it’s applied to art books, medical books, popular magazines and drawing guides. #BooksNot Bans


84% of prisons in the U.S. require books come from “approved vendors” which rarely include independent bookstores and always deny free books.#PrisonBannedBooksWeek

Test your knowledge

Think you know how to send books and reading materials to people in carceral settings? Take this simulation test and see how many items reach their intended recipient. How hard could it be?

Read and Share Their Stories

Incarcerated people suffer when they’re denied access to literature and learning. Read some of their stories here:


PEN America has teamed up with prison book programs, higher education programs in prisons and other nonprofits that send literature to incarcerated people to tell elected officials that we do not support prison censorship. 

OUR PARTNERS

Haymarket Books
Freeamerica
Know Your Rights Campaign
Justice Arts Coalition
San Francisco Public Library
The Free Black Women’s Library
Study and Struggle
Project NIA
Urban Library Institute
National Prison Writing Archive

INCITE
Library Services to the Justice Involved
Riker’s Memory Project
Cornell Prison Education Program
Noname Book Club
Inside Books
Asheville Prison Books
Big House Books
Appalachian Prison Book Project
The Hull Family Foundation

Seattle Books to Prisoners
Midwest Books to Prisoners
LGBT Books to Prisoners
Alabama Books to Prisons
Chicago Books to Women in Prison
Wisconsin Books to Prisoners
Claremont Forum
Prion Health News
American Prison Writing Archive