The publisher's request came at a chilling moment, on the heels of presidential spokeman Ari Fleischer's Sept. 26 warning (later retracted) that "all Americans ... need to watch what they say, watch what they do." In the weeks that immediately followed Sept. 11, television host Bill Maher and essayist Susan Sontag were excoriated for presenting unconventional views on the hijackers, and newspaper journalists at the Texas City Sun and the Daily Courier in Oregon were fired for voicing unpopular opinions.

Given the tenor of the times, Moore had reason to assume that his publisher would follow suit. After two months of uncharacteristic silence ("I spoke to no one in the media. I didn't want to upset anyone at News Corps [HarperCollins' parent company] and tip the scales toward the decision of pulping my book."), the author discussed his struggle with a crowd of 100 during a keynote speech at a New Jersey Citizen's Action private event on Dec. 1. He even read passages from the book: "It may be the only time it's ever heard by anybody," he explained at the time. "As far as I knew, there wasn't any press there, so I told people what had happened. They asked, 'What do you want us to do?' I said, 'Don't call the publisher, don't call the press. Let me deal with it.'"

But one person in the crowd refused to heed Moore's request. Ann Sparanese, a librarian at Englewood Library in New Jersey and a board member of the American Library Association (ALA), returned to work that Monday and posted a message on several ALA listserves -- among them, Library Juice -- detailing Moore's predicament. According to the ALA, libraries represent big money to publishers, spending over $2 billion a year for books and electronic information, and because of it, librarians have publishers' ears.

"I thought these particular librarians would be especially concerned," explains Sparanese. "The ALA has this big conference coming up in midwinter, and all of the publishers have booths there. At the very least, I thought some of us would've gone over to the Harper booth and said, 'What gives?'"

In her posting, Sparanese explained, "This is NOT a question of the CIA or the government demanding that a publisher stop publication for national security or some other well-known reason. The publisher just decided to walk away from the money -- the book's ALREADY printed and sitting in a warehouse -- because of the current war-inspired, anti-dissent atmosphere. Even satire is biting the dust, by the publisher's own hand."

Publishing insiders caught wind of the Moore's battle with HarperCollins on December 4th, when Steven Zeitchik of the publishing trade magazine Publisher's Weekly broke the story. He confirmed the existence of the conflict with both editor Cal Morgan and Moore's agent Mort Janklow. The New York Post followed up on the story the next day, and on December 14th, Sparanese's message was quoted extensively in "Holt Uncensored," a twice-weekly publishing industry e-mail newsletter issued by former book review editor and critic for The San Francisco Chronicle Pat Holt. Within days of the Library Juice posting and the Publishers Weekly article, a HarperCollins editor told Moore that they were receiving a lot of email from angry librarians about "Stupid White Men." Moore hadn't realized Sparanese had attended the Citizen's Action event (the two never met), but he partly attributes the publisher's shift in stance to her mobilization of other librarians. "Librarians see themselves as the guardians of the First Amendment," says Moore. "You got a thousand Mother Joneses at the barricades! I love the librarians, and I am grateful for them!"

Lisa Herling, who says she was not familiar with the librarians' e-mail campaign, could neither confirm nor deny their impact. "From our perspective, I don't know if it has anything to do with our decision."

Throughout it all, Moore insists he has kept his relations with HarperCollins friendly and intact. "I have complete empathy and understanding with HarperCollins and what they were going through -- and what everybody's been going through -- since Sept. 11. We've never been through any of this, and everybody is reacting in various ways and some people are behaving inappropriately.

"But I think we have to cut everybody a lot of slack because nobody has a playbook here. They went with their first instincts, which were 'Don't offend the president.' They said to me, 'We're publishing four Sept. 11 books, and we don't want to put this out and create confusion in people's minds.'

"This is a fascinating story because it shows what a free society does when confronted with a crisis. Do we maintain our sense of freedom and liberty and dissent and open discussion of the issues? Or do we start putting the clamp down? I waited it out to see. And HarperCollins eventually did the right thing. I'm really proud of this book, and I'm dying for it to get out there."

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