Those "banned books" displays in bookstores often feature classics like To Kill a Mockingbird, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, or The Diary of ((( Anne Frank )))—stuff that was indeed shoved down your throat in elementary school—for a few intertwined reasons rooted in how book bans actually work and how they're marketed.
First, the term "banned" is frequently exaggerated or outdated. Many of these books were challenged or temporarily removed from school libraries or curricula decades ago, often in the 1980s or 1990s, due to complaints about racial slurs, stereotypes, or sensitive topics like slavery and prejudice. For instance, Huckleberry Finn faced pushback for its use of the N-word, even though it's a critique of racism. But they weren't outright "banned" nationwide; they were just pulled from some classrooms or shelves amid cultural debates. Today, they're staples in education precisely because they've been "vindicated" as important for teaching history and empathy. The American Library Association (ALA) tracks these challenges, and their Banned Books Week promotion highlights them to celebrate free speech, drawing from a list that's heavy on school-assigned lit.
Second, bookstores and publishers love the irony and buzz. These displays are less about current censorship and more about nostalgia-driven sales. Titles you read in school are familiar, so they're easy hooks for adult buyers reminiscing or parents grabbing "edgy" reads for