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Book bans, reading as a resolution and what’s popular in ’24 with Pearl Street Book’s Hartung, La Crescent library’s Witkins

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Pearl Street Books owner Beth Hartung (left) and La Crescent Public Library director, Jess Witkins, in the WIZM studio for La Crosse Talk PM.

The owner of Pearl Street Books, Beth Hartung, and La Crescent’s public library director, Jess Witkins, stopped in the WIZM studio to discuss, what else, books, including the best of 2024, book bans, reading as a New Year’s resolution, and what’s changed in popularity over the year and years.

This is part of a series of La Crosse Talk PMs about New Year’s resolutions, as we discussed a couple of different strategies to help get you reading more — and how to stick with it. 


La Crosse Talk PM airs weekdays at 5:06 p.m. Listen on the WIZM app, online here, or on 92.3 FM / 1410 AM / 106.7 FM (north of Onalaska). Find all the podcasts here or subscribe to La Crosse Talk PM wherever you get your podcasts.


We also talked about a shift in popular genres over the years — including to fantasy to horror to unsolved murders — plus what’s been most popular in 2024 and what is a must read this year, and ever.

The view from upstairs at Pearl Street Books in downtown La Crosse on Dec. 27, 2024 (PHOTO: Rick Solem)

We discussed book bans, how Wisconsin and Minnesota have handled those and making sense of why they happen.

Other things we hit on included buying used and the two instances when you should buy new, plus reading physical books versus a digital copy. 

Hartung has owned Pearl Street Books downtown for three years, and talked about some of the events she’s been holding there to make the store more inclusive and a third space. Witkins has been with the library systems eight years and talks about programs they have and what’s been popular to the public there, lately.

The view from the floor at Pearl Street Books in downtown La Crosse on Dec. 27, 2024 (PHOTO: Rick Solem)

Host of WIZM's La Crosse Talk PM | University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point graduate | Hometown: Greenville, Wis | Avid noonball basketball player and sand volleyballer in La Crosse

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1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Kevin

    December 31, 2024 at 9:39 am

    Banned, hah, I am unaware of any book being banned. I do believe parents, who pay for schools, have a voice in what is and is not available in the school library. That is far cry from being banned. That is called discernment. Of course, one person’s discernment is another person’s censorship, we have learned that over the course of time, guess where. Parents of course should not be the ‘last’ say in what is available in a school library, mob rule, can get out of hand, we have seen that, guess where. All this said, I think we can find better reading material than teach little Johnny and little Susie how to masturbate OR or the promotion of gender confusion, OR how to live a homosexual lifestyle, OR how to have sex without your parental knowledge.

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