Knox County’s Roots Ban: When a Local Literary Hero Is Kicked Off the Shelf
Alex Haley’s ‘Roots’ gets the boot from Knox County Schools under Tennessee’s Age‑Appropriate Materials Act, sparking regional pride and uproar.
Hold your tinfoil—but this time, the noise came from the law, not the basement. On May 15, 2026, Knox County Schools decided Alex Haley’s ‘Roots’ was too hot for their libraries. The culprit? Tennessee’s Age-Appropriate Materials Act (AAMA), which has morphed into a statutory battle-ax, lopping ‘Roots’ right out of reach.
The AAMA, a lesson in how a law can trip over its own shoelaces, was amended in 2024. It decided that context might be nice but isn’t required when you’re purging books from shelves. Goodbye, librarian discretion; hello, redacted literature circus. This law’s amendment rolled in like an oversized novelty eraser, leading to 124 titles being banned, up from 113 in May 2025.
‘Roots’ wasn’t just another book on the shelf. Alex Haley’s ties to East Tennessee run deep—statues, farms, you name it. Yet, with one stroke of the legislative pen, Knoxville’s own literary giant faced the exit sign, while his statue remained to awkwardly watch this historical disappearing act.
The school board meeting that lifted this book from its shelves turned into a bona fide freakout. Rev. John Butler and Rev. Renee Kesler brought the rhetorical fireworks. Meanwhile, PEN America’s lament echoed louder than a library shushing. Family members like Bill Haley chimed in, calling the ban a short-sighted move that erased cultural legacy faster than any library fine.
The irony meter hit a high note—’Roots’ can still be taught in class, but borrow it from the library? Nope. School desks get to grapple with history, while library shelves remain conspicuously void. Even as his statue stands tall, the novel’s absence makes it feel like the book is sitting there in spirit, open-faced, in someone’s imagination.
As the fog lifts, remember: next time the panic alarms sound, before lighting up the group chat, ask if the law wrote the plot twist. It’s odd—’You can’t ban a statue, but you can ban the book in its lap.’
Sources
- WVLT Local Report on Roots Ban
- The Guardian National Analysis
- ACLU-TN Explanation of AAMA Amendments
Keep Me Marginally Informed