Anthony Aycock is the legislative library director at the North Carolina General Assembly. He is a writer, teacher, and librarian and has spent 25 years working in government, academic, and private law libraries, as well as teaching academic and creative writing. A frequent contributor to Medium and Information Today, he has also written for Slate, the Washington Post, Literary Hub, Reactor (formerly Tor.com), the Missouri Review, the Gettysburg Review, Ploughshares, and more.
Just Plain Filthy is a readable, even personable look at the historic context of today’s surge in censorship. Aycock writes engagingly about the legal arguments and specific details of the cases brought before the U.S. Supreme Court about our First Amendment rights. He concludes with what seems a likely prediction: Pico is headed for a revisit – and the longstanding precedents that have underwritten our understanding of intellectual freedom may not survive. -- James LaRue, author of On Censorship: A Public Librarian Examines Cancel Culture in the US Using his own life as a framework, Anthony Aycock has written a history of book banning that is both specific and comprehensive in scope. The Island Trees v Pico US Supreme Court case provides a perfect historical case for understanding our current intellectual freedom landscape. -- Emily J.M. Knox, Professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA This book is essential reading for anyone concerned about book bans and free expression. Aycock shows how libraries, students, and school boards, as well as judges and juries, shape the First Amendment in real-life applications. -- John Chrastka, Executive Director, EveryLibrary, USA