I'm grateful for the Blume fundraising letter, though, because it highlights something busy parents and teachers all too often don't realize: That book your child is reading is imparting values, and they might not be your own. "I first heard about sex from Judy Blume," a fortysomething mother of six told me immediately after I mentioned Blume's name to her. Today, perhaps, that's not the situation -- Blume's not the first time -- our culture being as oversexualized as it is. But Blume remains an unnecessary presence in children's lives, as a substitute parent and cheerleader of that sex-ed crazed culture that she served as a trailblazer of. And a presence trusted adults put in children's lives, as if issuing an Imprimatur, A Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval.
Though frequently thought of as the harmless author of "Superfudge," that spin is fudging the reality of Judy Blume. Her books are hormonal cheerleaders -- as if adolescents' bodies need the help. In "Forever," Blume is right where she was in her fundraising letter, praising a progressive grandmother whose only fault seems to be that she is so devoted to Planned Parenthood rallies that she doesn't have time to help her granddaughter get contraception from there. Planned Parenthood does provide young Katherine with the Pill and makes a graphic first-time scene possible.
Next time you're just happy your daughter or son is reading, consider that your child may be reading, "Can you spread your legs some more ... and maybe raise them a little?" That's in "Forever," which is clearly a pre-teen or teen book (if that makes it better -- I'm not so sure). "Deenie," however, is for children on a fourth-grade reading level. Would you knowingly hand your third or fourth grader a guide to self-arousal? You are when you hand him "Deenie."
This is the dirty little secret the Planned Parenthood world has long been aware of even if every parent and teacher hasn't. As one writer on the RH Reality Check Web site put it: "When you can't count on the government, schools, or dubiously funded clinics for medically accurate and comprehensive sex education, you can still count on Judy Blume."
In her fundraising letter, Blume writes that "If you are the daughter whose mom had the guts to give you the answers to questions you couldn't quite figure out how to ask," you should give to Planned Parenthood. If you are the daughter whose mom didn't have "the guts," Blume was probably on your classroom bookshelf -- or maybe your parents even provided, unknowingly -- to make the introduction. Forget long, protracted policy debates about sex ed. Blume has had it all covered, since, perhaps, long before your child's fourth-grade teacher was even born.