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Thursday, September 8, 2022

Censorship

In general, I don't censor books for content at the store.
I follow a librarian's code of not banning––but not emphasizing––offensive stuff.

Actually, it's rarely a problem because mostly I go by what sells, and I've found that right-wing stuff doesn't sell here, anyway. I don't bother to put it out.
Ditto old liberal stuff--really, any political books that aren't current don't move. (And the market is flooded with old copies of books by Glenn Beck and Michael Moore anyway.)

BUT...
yesterday I set up this side-by-side: The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea + Moby Dick (aren't I clever?) and took its photo.
Only this morning, posting it here, did I read the blurb on the cover of Sailor:
"A Novel of the Homicidal Hysteria that Lies Latent in the Japanese Character".
???
OMG. What rubbish! And not written by the author, but the publisher.
I am taking that off the shelf. Or, maybe I should stick a sticker on the cover? Or over it? At the very least, not face it forward.

Another question:
What to do with the first English translation (1933) of Mein Kampf ("My Struggle")? Someone donated it to the store a few years ago, and it has sat since then on the shelf of "books to look up" by my desk.
I have looked it up--it's worth some money (like a hundred bucks), and it has some historical interest...
But I hate to put it out. It feels polluting. So I don't.

I've thought about asking a university library if they want it, or what to do with it, but I haven't gotten around to doing that.
So it just sits there.

I did put out a copy of The Turner Diaries, but it was marketed by Barricade Books (1996) as a warning. Big red letters on the cover says  "This book contains racist propaganda" and that is "being published to alert and warn America".

I didn't even google it when I put it out--just marked it up a tiny bit (I think $1.99 instead of .99). But--wow--looking for it now, turns out Amazon pulled this book after the January 2021 attack on the US Capitol--even this version of it-- "for providing a roadmap to last week’s deadly attack on the US Capitol".

My bookseller's immediate reaction was, "I should have priced it higher." (And it does go for up to $100 online.)
But also, and more importantly, Should I have sold it?

I'd still say yes, because of the publisher's presentation.
I'd add a sticker to the cover now. After the words, "The FBI said it was the blueprint for the OK City bombing...",
I'd add ". . . in 1995" [kids won't even know] "and for the 2021
attack on the US Capitol".

Thoughts on this quandry are welcome.

8 comments:

  1. if it were me, i would just leave it. i always find it interesting to see what publishers add to book covers that they think will sell the book.

    the blurb on a 1963 printing of The Catcher in the Rye -- "this unusual book may shock you, will make you laugh, and may break your heart -- but you will never forget it."

    publishers don't tell me how to experience your book!

    kirsten

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  2. KIRSTEN: Yes, maybe so... But I know a couple Americans of Japanese descent--including a former volunteer at the store-- who've been hurt personally by this language and the idea that they are inherently, "racially" vicious...
    I think of them and hate to leave the book out.
    Also, it's slander to the book!

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  3. P.S. KIRSTEN: But thanks for weighing in. It really troubles me, this question, though it doesn't come up all that often quite so blatantly.

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  4. Slander to the book, indeed.
    I wonder what blurb this publisher would write for advertising Moby Dick: "When a bloodthirsty whale and a bloodthirsty whaler clash together, both take no prisoners and the ocean turns red!!!"... perhaps?

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  5. TORORO: LOL. Funny idea, to write blurbs for classics.
    In today's climate, perhaps Moby Dick would get something like
    "Justice is meted out to vicious exploiter of Ocean Life--a classic exposé of toxic masculinity" or some such thing?
    --FREX = FRESCA

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  6. Put everything out.

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  7. Yikes — I would not put the Turner out for sale. A glance at the current publisher’s website is reason enough. You could send MK to my rep in Congress; I’m sure she’d love an extra copy.

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  8. CAMILLE FAN: Thanks for that--that IS the Librarian's credo, though of course physical realities (Budget, shelf space, readership) curtail it.

    MICHAEL: Thanks for your perspective. The Turner Diaries are really creepy. I'm okay with putting them out--does the average person even know this is going on? Maybe now they do, after the Capitol raid...

    LOL, your Hitler-admiring rep... she doesn't need encouragement.

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