The passage is discussing a controversy between the Big-Endians and the Small-Endians, likely a reference to a political or religious conflict where the Big-Endians' literature has been banned and their party members restricted by law. The conflict seems deep-rooted and significant, given the extensive literature published on the topic.
"The Forbidden Fountain of Oz" was written by Eloise Jarvis McGraw and published in 1980.
The title of Bruce Barton's book, The Man Nobody Knows, referred to Jesus. It was published in 1925, and was met with controversy.
The controversy was caused by Holocaust deniers, who detest the book. Before it was published Anne Frank's father edited the diary for publication, on the advice of the publishers. Nearly all books by dead authors require some editing. See the link, which provides some information on these matters.
In 1843 John Calcott Horsley designed the first Christmas card. It was actually published in 1846 and caused some controversy because a child was depicted drinking wine.
The principle of a list of forbidden books was adopted at the Fifth Lateran Council in 1515, then confirmed by the Council of Trent in 1546. The first edition of the Index Librorum Prohibitorum, dated 1557 was published by Pope Paul IV. The 32nd edition, published in 1948 included 4000 titles. The Index was suppressed in 1966. http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/indexlibrorum.html It was the best way of keeping us faith ful to the Church. I request it be reinstated.
El Khabar is a daily newspaper published in Algeria. The first edition was released in 1990. The newspaper is independent and sometimes reporters and Journalists have gone to jail over controversy over what had been printed.
It's written by Patricia Cornwell. I don't know where it was first published, but according to my reading of it the case is very unclosed. Patricia Cornwell's bestseller was published in 2002 in hardcover first. Although there will always be controversy with a case such as JTR, Cornwell's enormous amount of circumstantial evidence is overwhelming. Scott Peterson was convicted on much less evidence than Miss Cornwell presented.
"A Million Little Pieces" was originally published and promoted as a memoir of James Frey's struggle with addiction and his road to recovery. However, it later came to light that parts of the book were fabricated, leading to controversy and a public apology from the author.
No. Scotophobin is a peptide that Georges Ungar, a physiologist working at Baylor University, claimed to code for fear of the dark in rats. This work, published in the early 1970s, touched off a storm of controversy. The critics prevailed.
Op-ed pieces that are well-written, provide a fresh perspective on a current topic, backed up by data or expert opinions, are more likely to get published. Additionally, op-eds that are timely, relevant, and address a pressing issue or controversy have a higher chance of being picked up by publishers.
"The Satanic Verses" by Salman Rushdie is not illegal in the UK. However, the book did face controversy and was the subject of protests due to its perceived blasphemous content when it was first published in 1988.
your will is published after you die.