Freedom to Read Raising Awareness, Celebrating Freedom of Expression, Encouraging Participation
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Freedom to Read Kit

Clip Art

Each year, the Freedom to Read Kit includes new clip art, based on the poster design.

Use the clip art to make bookmarks for Freedom to Read Week or "shelf-talkers" (cards to insert between books on the shelves in your school or public library or bookstore to catch the patrons' attention) for books included on the Challenged Books List, or other books challenged in your community.

A sheet of clip art is included with Freedom to Read Kits ordered from the Book and Periodical Council, or it may be downloaded below in a format suitable for printing.

To download images, right-click on the file name and choose "Save Target As"

Freedom to Read 2010 clip art

 

Photograph of two girls reading
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"It is too late in the day to stop men thinking. If allowed to think they will speak. If they speak they will write, and what they write will be printed and published. A newspaper is only a thought-throwing machine, a reflex of the popular mind. If it is not, it cannot live. We are not disposed to send our proof-sheets to anyone to correct."

— Amor de Cosmos (1825-97), British Columbian newspaper editor, in The British Colonist (1859), after the governor of British Columbia, Sir James Douglas, attempted to suppress the newspaper