“Another interesting library fact: Charles Darwin’s Origin of The Species regularly disappears from the shelves, generally never to return, so they are simply stolen. Other libraries report the same.”
Is this true? Is there any proof or records?
A quick search of the catalog here at work shows 26 copies on various bib records in our system, zero showing any of our various statuses that essentially mean “probably stolen.”
It’s actually usually called “On the Origin of Species”, but its full title is “On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.”
Although I wouldn’t put it past scattered individuals to do this sort of thing, I just want to note that this sort of behavior has been reported about two other groups in the past – Mormons have been accused of removing anti-Mormon volumes, and Scientologists have been accused of making off with anti-Scientologist literature. I seriously doubt it’s true in the first case. I wouldn’t put it past the Scienos to try and run off with copies of “The Bare-Faced Messiah” or “A Piece of Blue Sky” – there are so few anti-Scieno pieces that get successfully published that it would be worthwhile, and they have a history of organized action. But the truth is that I’ve seen plenty of literature critical of them in the libraries. So I doubt if they really did try and swipe all their detractors.
Bottom line, this is a familiar story, and it’s not likely o be true.
I have heard the “Steal this Book” and the “Anarcists Cookbook” are impossible to keep in general circulation. I know that we could not keep them out on a shelf at the 3 bookstores I worked at.
I dredged up an old news article about an ALA effort to identify the most frequently stolen library books. Darwin isn’t mentioned, but other books despised by Christian fundamentalists are, including books on witchcraft, homosexuality, and abortion: U.S. libraries checking out book theft / 'Most-stolen' list will help curb crime
A question to librarians: Would such tactics (towards any book) really result in less presence of the respective work, or rather in a lower mean age and better condition of library copies?
I’ve definitely seen it with Wiccan books in a small conservative midwestern town where I used to live. (A high rate of stolen-ness that is - I always thought it was fundies taking away our information, but upon thinking about it now, it may have even been young Wiccans who didn’t want to get disowned by mom and dad)
It seems The Temptations have been trying to bring this to our attention for a while now!
"Heard some talk about Papa doin’ some storefront preachin’.
Talkin’ about savin’ souls, and all the time leachin’.
Dealin’ in dirt!
And stealing in the name of the Lord. "