• A Texas middle school named after a Black author said some parts of his biography are "not appropriate" for students. 
  • George Dawson's "Life Is So Good" is under review in the district after a teacher said she wanted to teach it to her seventh-grade class. 
  • Dawson's great-grandson Chris Irvin said the move is "hurtful" and "confusing." 

A Texas school district has deemed parts of a Black author's biography "not appropriate" for middle school students, even though one of the middle schools in the district is named after the writer. 

Carroll Independent School District in Southlake, Texas, is currently reviewing whether the book "Life is So Good," written by George Dawson and Richard Glaubman, is appropriate for seventh graders in the district, including those who go to Dawson Middle School, local ABC News affiliate WFAA reported

The district said in a statement shared with WFAA that the book has neither been banned nor challenged by any parent. Instead, the district determined that some of the content in the book was inappropriate for students after a seventh-grade teacher requested to teach it in her class, the district said.

The district declined to share which portions of the biography it believes are inappropriate but told WFAA it is conducting a full review and may move forward with options such as removing some sections or notifying parents of the content before it is taught.

Carroll ISD did not immediately respond to Insider's request for comment. 

Dawson, a lifelong resident of Dallas, was the grandson of a slave and did not learn to read until the age of 98. At 103, he published his biography with Glaubman. 

Dawson's great-grandson, Chris Irvin, told WFAA that he was confused by Carroll ISD's move considering he and his family have visited the school at least five times for a reading of "Life is So Good."

"That's hurtful," Irvin told WFAA of the book review. "You take away the bad and the ugly, and you only talk about the good, that doesn't add up."

"Black history is American history," Irvin continued. "You can't have one without the other. I can't go to your history and tell you, 'hey x that out of your life, that didn't happen.'"

Irvin told WFAA he suspects the first chapter, which details Dawson's friend's lynching after he was wrongly accused of raping a white woman, could be the problem. 

"You can say, 'Hey, my life wasn't all good. My life wasn't all bad,'" Irvin said. "It's the whole puzzle piece that puts this all together that makes this worthwhile, makes us human."

Carroll ISD is currently the subject of a civil rights investigation by the US Department of Education, the Dallas Morning News reported.

The investigation was opened last year when the district previously made headlines for its stance on books.

At the time, a top administrator at Carroll ISD advised teachers in the district that if they want to have books about the Holocaust in their classrooms, they should also have books that offer "opposing" viewpoints, NBC News reported.

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