Book challenge censorship and repression in Grolier Club New York city exhibition
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Book challenge censorship and repression in Grolier Club New York city exhibition
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (Editions for the Armed Services, Inc., No. K-28), for which author Betty Smith received an unparalleled 10,000 troop fan letters.



NEW YORK, NY.- The Grolier Club in New York City presents an exhibition this fall about the power of books and ideas at a time of censorship and repression. On view from September 27 through December 30, 2023 in the Grolier Club’s ground floor gallery, The Best-Read Army in the World tells the story of how the U.S. military fought against propaganda and promoted free thought by disseminating more than one billion books, magazines, and newspapers to 16 million American troops worldwide, partnering with the U.S. publishing industry to create pocket-sized paperback books called “Armed Services Editions,” as well as petite issues of newspapers and popular magazines.

The exhibition features approximately 225 pieces from the collection of Molly Guptill Manning (best-selling author and associate professor of law, New York Law School), including miniature books and periodicals, photographs, posters, artwork, propaganda leaflets, and letters. The publications provided an escape from war, information that would diffuse falsehoods, and reminders of home – all in the smallest form possible. Highlights include rare prototypes for troop-friendly publications, a bundle of Armed Services Editions in its original packaging, a U.S. army librarian uniform, and a display on World War II-era book bans. The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue published by the Grolier Club.

“During World War II—a time of rampant propaganda and Nazi book bans—the United States military sent troops into battle armed not only with weapons, but with ideas,” said Manning. “Reading was so prevalent among the troops that in 1945, the New York Post declared that the United States had ‘the best-read Army in the world.’ Words were weapons, and the best way to fight repression was to read.”

Exhibition Highlights

During World War II, the Victory Book Campaign hosted a nationwide book drive urging the American public to donate their favorite books to troops. A Victory Book Campaign poster on view encourages the public to Give More Books, Give Good Books (Washington, D.C.: Office of War Information, 1943) ­after receiving too many volumes that were damaged or unsuitable for troops, such as cookbooks and children’s books.

Despite the approximately 18 million books donated in 1942-43, they were almost exclusively hardcover books and foot soldiers needed more portable reading materials. Army Chief Librarian Raymond Trautman invented a miniature paperback book from a blank magazine cut in half – formatted with two columns of text, a horizontal orientation, and a stapled binding, the Armed Services Edition was born.

More than 123 million pocket-sized ASE paperbacks were distributed to troops during World War II. Notable selections on view include George Lowther’s The Adventures of Superman (Editions for the Armed Services, Inc., No. 656), published in 1945 and distributed to coincide with V-E Day; a “two-up” edition, with two books printed per page, of H. G. Wells’ The War of the Worlds (Editions for the Armed Services, Inc., No. 1091) and Francis Wallace’s Kid Galahad (Editions for the Armed Services, Inc., No. 1092); and A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (Editions for the Armed Services, Inc., No. K-28), for which author Betty Smith received an unparalleled 10,000 troop fan letters.

The magazine industry also experimented with reducing the size of their publications, substituting newsprint for glossy paper and eliminating advertisements. On view are overseas editions of The New Yorker and the Saturday Evening Post, each with their iconic cover illustrations but printed at a fraction of the size of the domestic editions. Troops also created their own publications, with more than 4,600 unique newspapers such as The Rainbow Reveille, Tough Sheet, or Scars & Gripes produced on military mimeograph machines or “liberated” professional presses.

American soldiers invaded Europe carrying titles and authors that had been banned and burned by the Nazis. In May 1943, the tenth anniversary of the book burnings that swept across Germany, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt paid tribute to books in a speech. “Books cannot be killed by fire. People die, but books never die,” he said, and urged Americans to read more books and donate to the Victory Book Campaign, as “in this war, we know, books are weapons.” A 1943 poster on view features a striking illustration by Steve Broder, with an excerpt from Roosevelt’s speech printed on an enormous book being licked by flames as men throw books into a bonfire.

The Best-Read Army in the World also explores how women were instrumental during World War I and World War II in getting books into the hands of troops. Many volunteers in the Women’s Army Corps were assigned to the Army’s Library Branch and served at posts around the world, facing prejudice and receiving little credit for their war work. On view in the exhibition is a late-1940s librarian uniform and garrison cap, as well as stories about trailblazing librarians.










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