COLUMBIA, 1/25/11 (Beat Byte) -- A national publisher's plan to remove the word "nigger" from
The Adventure's of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain's masterpiece about dysfunctional race relations in America, has had an odd pre-emptive effect in
Centralia, Boone County's second largest city.
To prevent novelty seekers from stealing the original, Centralia's Public library will pull it from the shelves, director Patt Olsen told the
Centralia Fireside-Guard. "If the publisher goes through with the censorship, then the library’s books might be seen as collector’s items by some, curiosities by others, and become the target of theft," she explained. Patrons can still check out Huck Finn, but from behind the library counter, she said "until the issue has receded from the public eye."
It seems like a strangely ironic move from a librarian, and Olsen said she doesn't approve of the censorship move, wondering where it would all stop.
"It is bad enough we have states changing text books," she said, "but now we have publishers rewriting the classics?"