They say words have power; in Alberta this fall, they are also being held accountable. The weight of this power is evident as classics such as 1984, The Handmaid’s Tale, and Brave New World have been marched off the shelves—not with a bang, but with the muted bureaucracy of a book-ban policy that swept through schools like a disinfectant spray, erasing what it deemed “contaminants.” Now, with the government’s sudden pause on the policy, these books linger in a strange limbo, neither restored to complete freedom nor entirely condemned. It feels less like policy and more like a plot—an unresolved chapter in a dystopian novel that seems determined to write itself.
The image is almost too on-the-nose: Orwell banned in the name of order, Atwood censored in the name of protection. Satire folds into reality until the two are nearly indistinguishable. In this unfolding drama, librarians scramble, parents argue, politicians posture, and Margaret Atwood herself gleefully joins the fray, penning satire that exposes the absurdity of it all. And in the midst of it, you, the reader, play a crucial role in shaping the narrative.
However, to stop at the spectacle is to miss the point. Beyond the headlines and the outrage lies a more profound allegory—about how societies treat imagination, how fear dresses itself as moral clarity, and how the desire to protect can so easily tip into the urge to control. This is a cautionary tale about the dangers of censorship and the importance of free expression.
If this all sounds like a fable, that is because it is one.
I. The Myth of the Perfect Children
In her biting little parable, Margaret Atwood gives us John and Mary, two children who are “very, very good.” They never pick their noses, never break out in acne, never grow restless or reckless, and—most miraculously—never die. They are spotless, stainless, eerily eternal. They are, in short, the dream children of every censor: obedient, unblemished, and utterly devoid of curiosity. However, even in satire, perfection begins to rot. What is the point of a child who never questions, never falters, never wonders? What kind of life is that, except an erasure disguised as virtue?
This is where Atwood’s joke sharpens into allegory. Governments, parents’ rights crusaders, and self-appointed moral gatekeepers often imagine the school library as a kind of garden. However, they confuse “garden” with “greenhouse.” A garden is unruly, alive, full of surprise—plants climbing where they are not meant to, roots breaking through stone. A greenhouse, on the other hand, is a controlled environment. Soil is sterilized, light rationed, and every pest exterminated before it can nibble a leaf. In a greenhouse, there is no wildness, no accident, no growth beyond the script.
Thus, the classics—those unruly texts that sprawl, that complicate, that remind us life is messy—are reclassified as weeds. Dangerous to the uniform crop. Too spiny, too tangled, too stubborn to be domesticated. Better to pull them up by the root than risk a child wandering into their shade.
Alberta’s book-ban decree makes the same mistake: it mistakes education for hothouse cultivation. It assumes children will wilt if exposed to the thorny, unsettling parts of literature. However, the irony is apparent: in trying to raise “perfect” children, the policy risks raising fragile ones instead—students shielded from weeds, but deprived of the resilience it takes to grow among them.
II. The Banhammer’s Shadow
Officially, Alberta’s decree claims to shield students from “explicit sexual content.” However, ambiguity is the real weapon here—the grey zones where meaning slips, stretches, and multiplies. The target is never just a naked body on a page. Suspicion creeps further, casting its net over the suggestive phrase, the charged metaphor, the double meaning that hints at complexity, the inconvenient truth whispered between the lines. In this climate, even silence becomes dangerous—because what if a pause, a gap, a missing word gestures toward something unspeakable?
What unnerves the censors is not the body but the imagination. Flesh on a page can be redacted, blurred, or blacked out with a marker. However, an image that lingers in the reader’s mind—a dystopian future, a woman stripped of her autonomy, a society that slides too easily into cruelty—cannot be erased so cleanly. Imagination resists deletion. It multiplies, it mutates, it plants seeds in places no policy can thoroughly sterilize. Thus, the ban does not reveal a fear of obscenity; it reveals a fear of thought itself.
Take The Handmaid’s Tale. Its power is not in graphic detail but in its relentless “what if?”—a question that destabilizes complacency. To remove it from shelves is to declare that dystopian warning itself obscene. What terrifies the ban’s architects is not sex on the page but dissent in the reader’s mind: the possibility that a student might read, reflect, and recognize the outlines of their own society within Atwood’s fictional theocracy.
Moreover, when the order was carried out, the results bordered on parody. Entire reading lists vanished. More than two hundred books were stripped away in what looked suspiciously like “vicious compliance”—school boards obeying the letter of the law so zealously that they exposed its absurdity. A law vague enough to ban 1984 is not a law about pornography at all; it is a law about power.
Here lies the shadow of the banhammer: once swung, it does not discriminate. It crushes the explicit and the implicit alike, flattening nuance, silencing ambiguity, and teaching students that safety lies in silence. It is not protection—it is suppression disguised as prudence.
III. Humour as Resistance
Atwood wields humour not as a balm but as a blade. Her joke is not gentle; it cuts. John and Mary—the children who never pick, never blemish, never die—are “perfect” only in the sense that wax figures are perfect: polished, bloodless, uncanny. Their flawlessness is grotesque because it reveals the hidden terror of regimes obsessed with obedience and purity. What they fear most is not the grotesque itself but the ordinary mess of human living: acne, rebellion, curiosity, mortality.
Humour, in this context, becomes a form of defiance. It does not soothe power; it unsettles it. Laughter refuses to be contained by the official narrative. It draws attention to the absurd labour required to maintain illusions of order—how much energy it takes to pretend perfection, how sterile it becomes, how unnatural it always was. A joke, when it works, forces the mask to slip.
This is why authoritarian instincts bristle at satire. Because humour is a truth serum dressed in laughter, exposing contradictions that power would rather keep hidden. Atwood’s parody of the “perfect children” is more than a gag—it is an x-ray of control, showing us that behind every sanitizing decree lies the same impossible fantasy: a society without friction, dissent, or surprise. Moreover, nothing is funnier—or more dangerous—than pretending such a world could exist.
IV. What This Means for Us
- For readers and writers: Collection matters. Literature is not merely entertainment. It is a repository for thought experiments, alternate worlds, and warnings. When the classics go, we lose axes by which to cut through the present.
- For educators and librarians: Vague policies are fertile soil for misuse. The pause in Alberta is hopeful—but it will only last if people insist on clarity (what “graphic” means), on protections, on defending the literary imagination.
- For citizens: We must ask what it means when we prioritize comfort over challenge. Do we want children who are never dirty, never curious, never uncomfortable—or do we want children who grow, who question, who resist?
Conclusion
The Alberta book ban, its sudden pause, and Atwood’s satirical response are not isolated skirmishes over curriculum. They are chapters in a larger fable about fear, control, and the precarious freedom of the imagination. A government may insist it is only protecting children from indecency. However, the allegory is more straightforward: the “perfect children” are never really children at all—they are the fantasy of a world without questions.
However, the books stand firm in the face of adversity. Orwell emerges from his literary exile, Atwood sharpens her pen, Huxley’s whispers grow louder from the shelf. The very works that have been deemed too dangerous are the ones that continue to haunt us, precisely because they articulate the dangers of silence and obedience. Their resilience serves as a beacon of hope in the fight against censorship.
The lesson is as old as the fables I study: you can cage the animals, but their voices still carry. You can convert the garden into a greenhouse, but weeds still find a way through the cracks. You can wield the banhammer, but laughter still echoes, unsettling the silence.
So perhaps the task is not only to read these banned and unbanned books, but to laugh with them—to recognize that humour, satire, and even absurdity are not just forms of entertainment, but powerful tools of vigilance. They remind us that perfection is sterile, that dissent is fertile, and that a society without discomfort is not a society at all but a mausoleum. They empower us to challenge the status quo and preserve our freedom of thought.
In other words: if words have power, then laughter is their rebellion. It is a potent weapon, a means to undermine the authority of those in power and remind them that their control is not absolute. Moreover, that is precisely why those in power fear it.
So, let us read 1984. Let us read The Handmaid’s Tale. Let us read the messy, contradictory parts of our history as literature, so that the next generation learns not only what is easy, but what is true. Let us read these banned books not out of defiance, but out of a determination to uphold the truth and preserve our freedom of thought.
The Alberta Book Ban – What is it?
In July 2025, Alberta decided that words themselves needed policing. A new ministerial order instructed every public school to pull books with “explicit sexual content” from their shelves. The examples given were a handful of graphic novels—Fun Home, Gender Queer, Flamer. But the language was so vague that some school boards went further, yanking more than two hundred titles, including 1984, The Handmaid’s Tale, and Brave New World. The result looked less like child protection and more like a purge of imagination. Supporters, mainly “parents’ rights” groups, framed it as safeguarding children; critics saw it as a blunt instrument that disproportionately struck queer literature and any story that made power look ugly. After a storm of backlash, the province hit pause, promising to “clarify” the rules. For now, the books sit in limbo—exiled, reprieved, but never safe.
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Cradles and Murders – Excerpt
her husband’s mortality sunk deep into the pit of her stomach, she examined her surroundings. The apartment felt smaller than the first time they had visited, and there was a lingering scent of a woman’s perfume. The curtains hung loosely behind the sofa which harboured the body, shut, isolating it from the world.
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The Neighbor’s Kid
Standing on the balcony I see the neighbor’s boy His name is Ahmad He’s small for his age Has dark hair And a broad nose My mother tells me to steer far from him Street kids are dangerous They smell like broken families Despair mixed with cocaine But I like the neighbor’s boy He visits…
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Relapse
I stood there looking at my reflection in a packed train, moving fast enough for my face to become fragments, a blend of aspects. But I still saw myself. A girl a woman someone no one. And I breathed in for the first time in a long time. And that day, I decided to stop…
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When will this end
My manager glares at her phone as she announces to the entire restaurant that two people in Montreal have been diagnosed with this new virus. I quit. Kids scatter around the classroom, fearing one another as our professor sneezes into the board. Bathrooms are crowded with contagious hands and heavy conversations. The virus has a…
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Pine Trees
The trees gossip about Empty parks and streets Pine trees stand in drought Keeping their distance from the pleats
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Ticks
wavering fingers hover over the keyboard chapped edges, distant — humming with the clock, the letters select themselves get loose enough to slide around the silver surface — tick, an acquired sound companions through the night — sit tight awaiting nothing anticipating a symphony between the keyboard us and the clock.
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Velvet Curtains
Velvet curtains drape down Flowing like a breezy river The sun pierces through Highlighting the room Titian red The color of dried roses which Smell of cheap perfume
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What Mothers Smell Like
Dark roasted coffee shadows her leaves a trace when she wills stains the walls of our home
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Flipping Through Scents
The faded scent of jasmine roses Tails me to dreamland Beckons me towards A fragmented past
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Apologies
I apologize Mother, for peeking through your wrinkles and creases I apologize Father, for dusting you under the rugs I apologize Brother, for bending your limbs so they could mimic mine
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Origins
One of my parents was a flaming torch, the other a used pillow. One was a fish net, the other a minnow.
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Transfer
Abbreviate bravery, calamity. Don’t endorse fallacies, great honor, idiocy. Juggle killers; leaders might not oppose pandemonium. Queries, rivalries, sanctuaries. To unknown victims we X yelping zeniths
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Ode to Palestine
Hazel strands burble down her spine, seizing the Jordan river. Stacked with bare feet, toddling her back, she’s an orphan river. Wide hips and slender waist, curves emulating the streets of Ghaza. Grandmother, can I braid your hair? It’s as silky as a bourbon river. Honey drips from between her thighs, sweet enough to make…
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Finding Home in A strange City: Exploring St-Henri Neighborhood
“The line is too long; do you want to try another place?” A woman tells the man next to her; perhaps her husband or spouse. “But I’m really in the mood for pies; let’s just wait a bit longer.” He replies as she sighs in agreement. The line is indeed long, for warm weekends are…
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My Non-Existent Lover
You stand beside me timidly Steal a couple glances at me I’m magnificent So lovely that you just want to touch me Experience me But you don’t want to exist with me You talk to me Lips so plump that I almost lose myself in you “You’re so beautiful” You say My beauty only exists…
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Drunk at 2 a.m.
One street light flickers in the distance But we remain in the dark Bodies one bench apart I pull you closer to me Ask the moon to sing a song So we could celebrate this love You smell like home Coffee mixed with vodka A hint of heavy cigarettes The smell of despair I run…
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Poets and Their Lovers
He decides to make these pages his homeAnd dances with my lettersJumps from one stanza to the otherHe makes all the letters in the alphabet seem so dull except the letters that belong to himAnd my pen only knows how to write his nameSo, everyone knows his name nowMy poetry blushes as he holds it…
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You Do Not Exist
You do not existYet my mother despises youYou do not existYet the world warns me about youYou do not existAnd still people convince me that you do not existSo, I guessYou really don’t existOr you’re not allowed to existBecause your existence is a tabooYour existence is frowned uponAnd I should not exist with youBecause our…
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Too Hard To Love
Dull eyesLoud soulBouncing from one girl to the otherExisting in everyoneEveryone except me.Tall figureBroad shouldersTelling me he cherishes meAs if I were jewelryAnd I believe himLove him backGive him parts of meExist in him.Only him.And we fall in loveLike any two soulsOr I think we fall in loveI’m not sure anymore.But he throws “love you”…
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Conversations With My Therapist PART II
I wish I had a cure A potion that can heal a broken soulI wish I had all the answers, to questions God himself can’t answer I wish I knew the secret, so, my heart can rest easy Don’t look at me like I’m insane I can see pity in your eyes as if I’m a bird with a broken wing I’m still…
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Mothers and Sons
He refuses to be called a loverIt sounds too vagueWants me to call him by his nameA name given to him by his motherAnd he hates when I trace his eyes with my brushTells me that he has his father’s eyesWishes he could erase themThe way he erased his father from themAnd when we both…
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The Ocean and Its Lover
I violently beat on the rocks My waves rising up and down as if breathing heavilyYou dip your feet in me And I thud so loud that the sky begins to shudder Fear begins to appear on your face and you hesitate You think twice before approaching closer But the sun shines so warmly on me And I gleam beneath its…
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Broken Mothers
And she smiles so widely in the face of strangers She smiles to her distant lover,to her detached brother.Holds her past between her hands And crumbles it.Burns it.Because she must not talk about it She must live the rest of her days pretending that part of her never existed As if she was born again Born again as a foreigner But…
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Break Ups On Mondays
Please, don’t break my heart tonightI have a morning class to go toAnd I promised my mother to stop cryingPromised a friend to stop hurtingSo, please spare me the acheThe tears and excusesDon’t love me for God’s sake If you’re planning to leave next TuesdayI have a life to liveCan’t spend it trying to forgiveYour…
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How Broken Hearts Fall In Love PART I
He asks me not to love him too hardBecause he might breakAnd when the moon finally risesI ask it to shine on himPerhaps it could heal him,enough to love againHe asks me not to sit too close to himBecause he might fall in loveAnd I wish he would fall in love, with meSo that the…
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How to Be an Addict PART II
Vodka bottles sleep in our bed tonight And we sleep on the floorDarkness hugs both of usEmbraces usAnd we embrace it backLips too red, blood on each cornerEyes too red, tears on each cornerMy words get stuck in my throat, choking meAnd I reach a shaky arm towards your bodyTry to touch your icy skinPerhaps…
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Exist Longer For Me
Exist longer for me, my love The days feel lighter with you in them And the sun shines brighter with you beneath it Let me hear your laughter echo in the empty halls of my mind Hold my hand, and don’t let go until this Earth burns to the ground Exist longer for me, I beg you Let me look at…
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Anger Issues
Through thin walls His voice travels around the apartment So brash that it shakes the floor and ceiling I try to stay still I knew this was bound to come I knew the storm had to come His chest rises and falls Like the ocean waves; slowly getting taller and livider The storm has arrived…
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How to Be an Addict PART I
Drowning in my own self Lost my way back to myself Colorless cheeks Boneless limbs Am I even human anymore? Lungs filled to the rim with nicotine Blood contaminated with cocaine Can’t decide if I should call him And I keep convincing myself That this is my final sin One last goodbye One last blowOne kiss can’t make me fall in love One pill can’t make me…
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Suicidal Lovers
Pills spilled on the edge of our bed Lips too busy loving I tell him to love me before I’m dead One last moment of loving Four walls, no door We’re locked in each other No one’s there to stop us We’re eternal lovers And I hold the pill between my teeth Smiling at him Beaming with euphoria Let’s go to heaven together And he takes the…
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Stay Safe
My mother tells me to smile often Rain doesn’t last and snow eventually melts She assures me that demons die when the sun rises I just have to survive till the sun rises How do I tell her that I haven’t smiled since I was 10?My mother tells me to keep praying to God The car has to park somewhere…
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Conversations With My Therapist
As I strip down to just my soul in front of her I begin to see myself through the eyes of an unbroken woman And with every step I take deeper into my past I fear that I might lose my way back to the present Sorrow in her eyes Tight lips with occasional nods She listens attentively to my life…
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Choices
If I had to choose between you and living I would choose you And it’s not because I’m suicidal Trust me when I say that I love you Love you enough to live for youAnd through a never-ending maze I chase you Ready to play games for you I can’t see an escape because these is no escape But I don’t need…
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Cigarettes and Lovers
His lips are addicted to the taste of nicotine and coffee He likes bitterness He smokes every 27 minutes And yes, I count the minutes He only looks at me every 52 minutes Its illogical being jealous of a cigarette, he tells me But why can’t his lips get addicted to the taste of me? Am I too sweet for him? How…
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Drunk Lovers
Through thick air, we exchange thick smiles And I wonder if he’s using physical cues of attraction And I google what do physical cues of attraction mean I can feel my body slowing down Heart racing Hand sweating Mouth dry I face him and say “wanna go out for a drink?”he thinks for a moment Its not really a moment, its two seconds He agrees to drown…
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Toxic Girlfriends
Every day he grows older Heavier A bit sadder His light dims down And his friends tell him that I suck the life out of him I feed on him On his happiness And my therapist thinks I’m too dependent on him Too attached to him But I love him. I don’t really love him…And he feels how distant my heart is My body sits far from him Refuses to…
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Two
In a room crowded with souls I can feel you In abandoned neighbour-hoods and empty halls I can feel you In dream and in materiality In imagination and in reality I can feel you God created everything in two One is not meant to exist without the other And my poetry can’t exist without you …
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Just My Imagination
“You have a big imagination” is what I have been told since I was a child. It is a true statement; however, the older I get the more I begin to hate this statement. As a child, having a large imagination is associated with intelligence; you are praised for your creativity and ability to turn…
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