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Apr 28, 2025 | Poetry, Writing

Help Build a Garden of Wildwords and Inclusive Beauty

Celebrating the Banned & Challenged: First They Came for the Books…

And I was not a book. Then, they went after the words. And I said, “Hah! No you don’t.

The list of banned words has grown as fast as the list of banned and challenged books. Those loud proponents of free speech – the ones who vociferously accuse “lefties” and “liberals” of trying to take away their First Amendment rights, simply because not everyone is interested in what they have to say, have done their level best to truly squelch free speech. But us “educated elites” (read: folks who can spell and decipher the big words in the US Constitution) have our own solutions – we will enshrine these words in poetry and share them with everyone who wants to read and listen. No, Tommy Tuberville, we poets are not destroying the military by reciting poems aircraft carriers and turning soldiers “woke.” These dudes aren’t exactly shrinking violets. Roosevelt could’ve taken you, Tommy.

You kind of have to laugh when the “Enola Gay” was flagged for removal from governmental websites by the very people who wouldn’t bat an eye at genocide, because it contains the word “gay.” But writers, it turns out, are unafraid of words. We just hone our nibs to a sharper edge – dip them in gall – and refuse to be silenced on the page.

Join in, if you will – see how many of the following words you can work into a poem or a short story. The list has grown since I posted my first challenge to you all – Poetry from Banned Words. Be as subtle, or as bitingly humorous, or as dark and angry as you want to be, while it is still your right to write.

Nearly 200 Naughty Words to Get Your Writing Banned by the Feds (a New York Times article – a gift from me to you).

After you’ve written your own poem, you can submit it here: Winning Writers Submission Manager – Live and Let DEI Anthology (no fee) (the deadline is Thursday, May 1, 2025 5:00 AM) or post your poem or short story link in a comment on my blog, if you would like to!

Holly Jahangiri

Holly Jahangiri is the author of Trockle, illustrated by Jordan Vinyard; A Puppy, Not a Guppy, illustrated by Ryan Shaw; and the newest release: A New Leaf for Lyle, illustrated by Carrie Salazar. She draws inspiration from her family, from her own childhood adventures (some of which only happened in her overactive imagination), and from readers both young and young-at-heart. She lives in Houston, Texas, with her husband, J.J., whose love and encouragement make writing books twice the fun.

2 Comments

  1. Melissa

    You know, when these lists first started coming out, I had a moment about the name of my blog: Bold and Queer. It’s about family history, but the AI bots don’t know that. And then I thought, “Welp, I’m a woman legally married to a woman so I’m surely already on someone’s list somewhere. Try me!” FFS…what even is this country anymore?

    Reply
    • Holly Jahangiri

      I wish I had an answer to that, Melissa. But you stay you.

      And thank you for visiting and for your comments tonight. It means a lot.

      Reply

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