Ten Of The Most Controversial Books

Some books attract a lot of controversy and even calls for banning the book from members of the public or those in religious or political organizations. Some qualities common in the most controversial books include religious degradation or slurs, foul language, violence, racism, extreme political views, and vivid or graphic sexual descriptions.

Here are some of the most controversial books that have fueled the flames of controversy ever since they were published.

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn – Mark Twain (1884)

A controversial book for years, Twain’s novel shows a contrast between indulgent childhood dreams and blatant cruel realities, bringing out the themes of equality, justice and human rights. In this book, Huck fakes his own death to run away to the river. There he meets an escaped slave named Jim. Together, they seek liberation and their journey tests them at every turn.

While Huck looks forward to returning to a freewheeling life, Jim looks for the personal freedom he has never known. With the entry of Tom Sawyer, Huck faces a dilemma of whether to return home or risk his life to help Jim achieve freedom.

Because the word “nigger” appears more than 200 times in the book and it was perceived as racial, it initially caused a lot of controversy, especially in the 20th century. This book was also criticized for its coarse language. Earnest Hemingway, however, called it “the best book we’ve had.”

Brave New World – Aldous Huxley (1932)

Published in 1932, Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World is his most popular novel, although it might not have been his most important. It was frequently challenged with banning attempts, and is still considered controversial. The reader is swept into Huxley’s vision of a future based on science and technology. The novel depicts drugs, sexuality, and suicide and reveals Huxley’s disdain for the culture of the United States. A group of parents attempted to get the book banned because they felt there was an overemphasis on negativity.

Nineteen Eighty-Four – George Orwell (1949)

Written in 1949 by George Orwell while he was dying of tuberculosis, the book brings to light the sad state and future of a society that is robbed of privacy, truth, or free will. This book forces us to re-examine our lives, lifestyles, and how our governments work. It offers a fresh perspective on many topics; totalitarianism, torture, mind control, the United States, the Soviet Union, privacy, technology, power, human emotions, organized religion, censorship, sex, and more.

It was a controversial book right from publication and remains so today. Many people claim that the work is unnatural and intense because it was written by a man choked with a subconscious death-wish. Many American reviewers also assumed that the book represented a repudiation of his democratic socialism.

The Catcher In The Rye – J.D. Salinger (1951)

This novel was topping the New York Times best-seller list almost immediately upon release in 1951. Salinger’s Catcher In The Rye is an account of three days in a 16-year-old boy’s life. It was originally meant for adults but eventually became a part of the curriculum in many high schools and colleges. It was also translated into many languages. There were several controversies for several reasons, such as the portrayal of sexuality and teenage angst, the use of profanity, the anti-white sentiment, and the excessive violence. Holden Caulfield, the protagonist, became an icon for defiance and rebellion. In fact Mark David Chapman, who shot John Lennon in 1980, cited the book as his reason for doing it.

Lolita – Vladimir Nabokov (1955)

Nabokov’s Lolita caused a storm of controversy when it was published in 1955 in France, and those controversies have shadowed the book ever since. This novel explores the mind of a pedophile named Humbert Humbert, who narrates his life and obsession for nymphets like the 12-year-old Dolores Haze. It was banned in France, the United Kingdom, New Zealand, South Africa, and Argentina. But in America, it was a huge success and is said to be the first book since Gone With The Wind to have sold 100,000 copies in the first three weeks.

I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings – Maya Angelou (1970)

This is the first of the five autobiographical works by Maya Angelou and was published in 1970. The title of the book was taken from the poem “Sympathy” by Paul Lawrence Dunbar, and it describes perseverance even in the face of oppression. Maya Angelou, through this book, gives an account of her youth filled with trauma, tragedy, frustration, disappointment and eventually independence.

Angelou describes the racism she and her grandmother encountered in the town of Stamps and other places, in spite of her grandmother having more money than the whites. There are passages in the books that describe how she was raped when she was just eight years old by her mother’s boyfriend. Her grandmother’s influence was what helped her overcome the hardships in her life. The graphic nature of the book, depicting details of abuse and rape was considered controversial by many. However, the book was widely hailed and even taught in schools. This book was also nominated for the National Book Award.

The Anarchist Cookbook – William Powell – (1971)

This 1971 cult classic is a guerrilla how-to book that provides strategies useful for activists — including violent activists. It covers several sections that describe organizing demonstrations, sabotage, affinity groups, stenciling, and other topics like supporting survivors of domestic violence and mental health.

This book angered government officials and anarchist groups felt it misrepresented anarchist ideals. Others criticized the book for the bomb-making recipes, which they said were dangerously inaccurate. Later, when Powell was older, he tried to censor his own book and said that this book was “a misguided product of my adolescent anger at the prospect of being drafted and sent to Vietnam to fight in a war that I did not believe in.”

The Satanic Verses – Salman Rushdie (1989)

This book by Salman Rushdie sparked controversies galore because of the controversial topic it touched. The title, The Satanic Verses, refers to an incident that is disputed between fact and fiction. Some called it a blasphemous treatment of the Islamic faith as Rushdie refers to the Prophet Muhammad as Mahound, which is the medieval name for the devil. In Pakistan, there were riots in 1989 over the book where a few people were killed, and many were injured in India.

In spite of Rushdie issuing an apology, the Iranian spiritual leader Ayatollah Khomeini condemned the author publicly, and went to the extent of putting a $1 million bounty for killing the author, increasing that to $3 million if the assassin was Iranian. Even Venezuelan officials threatened 15 months of prison for anyone who owned or even read the book. Japan imposed a fine on anyone selling the English edition and a Japanese translator was said to be stabbed to death for getting involved with the book. Major U.S. booksellers removed this book from the shelves because they received death threats. Rushdie himself lived in hiding for almost a decade. Such was the animosity towards the book, and in a way it makes it all the more appealing.

The Harry Potter Series – J.K. Rowling (2001)

J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series is wildly popular and seen generally as adventurous and harmless tales for children. However, this series has caused controversies over the past few years, from many different groups of people who look at them as stories that inspire children to become involved in witchcraft and the occult.

These novels follow the life of a young wizard, whose parents were killed by the evil Lord Voldermort. The young boy receives an invitation to attend Hogwarts School of Witchcraft on his eleventh birthday and each book represents a year of his life at the school. These books have their fair share of opponents (not to mention hoards of fans). Some parents and religious groups feel that these books can take children deep into the unwanted land of fantasy.

The Da Vinci Code – Dan Brown (2003)

A recent book that surrounded by controversy since its publication is The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown. The book gives a fictional account of characters revealing a hidden truth concealed by the Catholic Church for centuries, including the divinity of Christ, his celibacy, and the possibility of a genetic heritage. Most of the complaints against the book are due to the speculation and misrepresentation of the history of Roman Catholic Church and the basic questioning of the tenets of Christianity. The book was also criticized for inaccurate description of history, geography, European art, and architecture.

This is by no means a comprehensive list of all the controversial books as there are many more. But these are certainly some of the books that have been considered some of the most controversial books ever published.

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  • @Paul: The Oldest Book in the World
    The Bible was written over a time span of 1,500 years, from roughly 1450 BC (the time of Moses) to about 100 AD (following the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ), and is therefore the oldest real book in the world. It was written by over 40 different authors. The men who wrote the Bible came from every walk of life, shepherds, farmers, tent-makers, physicians, fishermen, priests, philosophers and kings. Despite these differences in occupation and the vast span of years it took to write, the Bible is an extremely cohesive and unified book. The Bible is often called ‘the Divine library’ because the authors of the Bible were inspired by God to write the messages and histories which they wrote.
    Plato´s and Aristotle´s books are from 300 to 400 BC.....

    • Some of the most fundamental Old Testament legends (for example, The Garden of Eden, which was based on the Sumerian Dilmun) originate from far older Mesopotamian myths. In fact, Abraham came from the ancient nation of Sumer, which was far more ancient and sophisticated than biblical Palestine. Cuneiform texts were written by the priests and learned men of Ur (ancient Babylon) and the surrounding cities centuries before the Bible began to take form. Some Old Testament stories were copied from neighboring cultures. The Bible copied the Egyptian concept of the afterlife, and then tweaked it for its own purposes. The Yahweh of the Bible is a sky god archetype copied from neighboring tribes. So the Bible and it's ideology is just a syncretic mish-mash of different beliefs, some of which predate Christianity and Judaism.

  • This is a great list- it's true that the best books are controversial.

    The Bible is a controversial book, too. I enjoy reading it, but it is not the oldest book in the world- not by a long shot. It is the same age as or younger than many ancient texts, including the I Ching (2800 BC), the Hammurabi Code (1760B.C), the Epic of Gilgamesh (circa 2150 B.C), the Precepts of Ptah-Hotep (2500), the Egyptian Book of the Dead (1600 BC), the Hindu Vedas (1500 BC) and others.

    Also, in the middle ages they didn't try to destroy all the Bibles. Some people didn't think common people should own Bibles, so they banned commoners from having them, and said only priests and scholars could read it, believing that putting God's word into the vernacular would desecrate it. The Bible was not written by common people because back in the ancient middle east, common people would not have known how to write.

    There is a good book about the history of the Bible itself called Misquoting Jesus by Bart Ehrman. It is definitely worth a read, if you are interested in textual criticism and the history of books.

  • We are talking here about the MOST CONTROVERSIAL BOOKS. The Bible is the MOST controversial book ever written, no doubt about that. And for a REAL BOOK, not scripts or else, it IS the oldest book on earth. And all those common people DID write the bible, because they were INSPIRED by God´s Holy Spitit in those days. And in the middle ages the Inquisition sure did try to destroy all the bibles in Europe. The Christians in those days had to bury their bibles in the ground so they would not be found to be destroyed. The Inquisition would burn and torture everybody who owned a bible, or were found with a bible in their hands. Even today in some countries you are not allowed to read a bible, you will get killed. And that makes it the MOST controversial book ever written.

  • The Bible is simply not the oldest book on Earth. Books originated in Ancient China, so the oldest "real books" are Chinese texts. The books of the Bible were written on scrolls. The Bible was not bound in book form for a while. The actual writing-down of the Biblical text took place long after the words of the I Ching and the Code of Hammurabi were written.

    The Bible we know is even younger. It is actually a series of books and over the years, priests and rabbis decided which books belonged in the canon.

    The Inquisitors did not want to destroy all the Bibles- they didn't want the Bible translated into the common language. They believed all Bibles should be in Latin. In fact, the Bible was often used for justification of the Inquisition. For example, they burned "witches" because the book of Exodus says "thou shalt not suffer a witch to live."

    These are the facts of history. The Bible is not the oldest book in the world, but that doesn't make it less valuable. The Sermon on the Mount is no less beautiful because it is pre-dated by the Book of the Dead. The only reason a person would manipulate history to say the Bible is older than it is, would be to emphasize their own righteousness- not to advance spiritual awareness and not to glorify God.

  • Shara I am not going to argue with you about the Bible, the Inquisition etc. What you wrote down is your opinion, that is NOT the real history of the Inquisition. In the middle ages they tortured and burned and slaughtered CHRISTIANS for having a Bible in their possesion! Tip: check on google for more and true information about that. One thing that is a fact, and even you cannot change that, the Bible is the MOST controversial books ever. And that´s what I´m trying to say here.
    It should be on TOP of this list, nr. 1.

  • Ok. The bible doesw cause controversy. but most means, out of a lot, they arent pinning down.. i thought that was obvious o.o

    ya.. im a bible humper... and people can dis what im saying but im just trying to find a book for my friend that is book hungry! SO lets stop fighting TT^TT

    .... im 13 and everyone here is most likely an adult.. i feel soooo young >.<

  • wow Juliette is a world class dumba*s if you think the bible is the most controversial book and it was written as a bound book. It has some controversial content like a talking snake a big boat that carried all animals but then..........

  • Juliette, I'm a fellow Christian, and you're an idiot. I agree with the suggestion that the Bible is possibly the most controversial book ever, but this list clearly doesn't include religious texts, and it's simply the opinion of one person, or at best, a small committee. Your way of arguing on behalf of Christianity, however, is juvenile, inflammatory, uninformed, and embarassing.

    When you make assertions like the ones you've made (such as denying Shara's brief overview of the Inquisition) without any legitimate foundation, it makes all Christians look bad. People see that you spout out stupid crap and they think that one must be an uninquisitive, dogma-swallowing idiot to be a Christian. Granted, enough Christians are like that to make the whole of Christendom look bad, but that doesn't excuse you joining in on that bandwagon. Your religion shouldn't require you to blind yourself to observable and recognized facts, rather, you need to figure out how God and Jesus fit into the world as we know it.

    I will probably never see this again, whether or not you answer me, I've just seen too much crap like this lately and I felt like I finally needed to weigh in for once.

  • @Eric and Greg: I really don´t care what you think or what you say. Go study history first before you write down dumb things. Hahahaha, The Bible IS and will ALWAYS be the most controversial book. Not even YOU can change that. Hahahahaha.