Comic book stores offer to send free copies of ‘Maus’ to Tennessee students

Comic book store owners are offering to send copies of Art Spiegelman’s Maus to Tennessee students after a county school board nixed it from eighth grade curriculums.

On Jan. 10, the McMinn County Board of Education voted unanimously to pull the Pulitzer Prize-winning graphic novel, citing concerns about profanity and cartoon depictions of partial nudity.

The book, which was published beginning in 1986, tells the story of Spiegelman’s parents’ experience during the Holocaust and their imprisonment at the Auschwitz death camp in Poland.

Since the ban, Maus has soared to No. 1 on the Amazon best sellers list.

Ryan Higgins, owner of the Comics Conspiracy shop in Sunnyvale, California, announced on Twitter last week that he would donate up to 100 copies of The Complete Maus to any family in McMinn County.

Higgins said the few copies he had in stock sold out immediately. He told The Washington Post that about 60 students who live in McMinn County school district had contacted him wanting copies, and he planned to ship them later this week when his next book shipment arrives.

Higgins read the book when he was a teen and it opened his eyes to history.

“It was heartbreaking and emotional, and it brought a whole new window to something I had little knowledge about,” he told the Post.

In Knoxville, just north of McMinn County, the Nirvana Comics shop said it would loan copies of Maus to students. Rich Davis, a co-owner of the store, told CNN they had planned to let students borrow its 10 copies of the book, but then interest skyrocketed. (HuffPost)

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