“Precisely,” he replied with a bright grin and a nod.
Continuing down the walk, he added, “what I found so peculiar about the notion of banning books, is the reasons behind some of the bans. A single word is the only reason for a few of them, because of modern ideas of racial insensitivity.” Thoth shook his head. “Mortals have seem to have become incapable of putting text into context of when the material was written or, in the case of fiction, takes place, to know if it would be period appropriate, and instead are forcing the application of their modern ideals on it. Utterly fascinating.”
He paused outside a door of what appeared to be a coffee shop. At least the signs and posters seemed to indicate as much. “Then there is the desire to ban popular children's books on the ludicrous notion that they will seduce a young mind to satanic worship. I would rather relish in anything that encourages a young mind to read, I'm certain Seshat would agree.” Not that he would ever dare speak for his wife, but Thoth was quite confident that as long as someone was reading, she would be happy. Regardless of the material.