There are so many things in this world to be outraged at. Insurrection, brutality, systemic racism, gerrymandering, child abuse, anti-maskers, domestic violence.
So to be outraged over a few Dr. Seuss books going out of print? Please. That is nowhere near the top thousand outrageous things.
Actually, it's not even on the list.
The big book news earlier this month was that six of the rhyming picture books for children written by Theodor Seuss Geisel — the man we all know as Dr. Seuss — will go out of print because they contain racist and offensive material.
Moments after the news came out, so did oodles of disinformation. (Disinformation: another thing to be outraged by.) So here are a few things I hope you already know:
Books go out of print all the time, and when that happens it is not "censorship."
The folks in charge of a writer's literary estate make decisions about what is to be done with that writer's work, and their decisions are not always popular — witness the estate of Harper Lee publishing "Go Set a Watchman," a book she firmly had not wanted published.
The decision to let six of Geisel's books go out of print was made by Dr. Seuss Enterprises. It wasn't made by the government, or Amazon, or your local bookseller or library. It wasn't the mythical Deep State. It was Geisel's estate, and the estate calls the shots.