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NEW: Amazon Caught In Jaw-Dropping Censorship Scandal

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Amazon has pulled paperback listings for the 1973 novel The Camp of the Saints from its U.S. site, igniting fresh accusations of political censorship and reviving a long-running fight over a book that has divided readers for decades.

Written by French author and explorer Jean Raspail, the novel depicts the collapse of Western civilization through mass immigration into France and other parts of Western Europe. Critics have long condemned the book as racist and xenophobic. Supporters argue it was a warning about cultural decline and the consequences of mass migration.

In an April 20 statement, Ethan Rundell, editor-in-chief of Vauban Books, said Amazon removed paperback listings for Vauban’s edition on April 17. Rundell said the Kindle and audiobook versions were still available at the time, and that the paperback could still be found on Amazon’s Canadian site.

“We have since been informed by Amazon that the book is in violation of the company’s ‘offensive content’ policy. Amazon has supplied no information as to which portions of the book are offensive, nor to whom,” Rundell said.

“Our edition of the book was first listed for sale on Amazon in July 2025. In the eight months since, Amazon has sold roughly 20,000 paperback copies of it.”

Rundell suggested the takedown may have been influenced by a recent New York Magazine article critical of Vice President JD Vance that referenced the novel. He said it mirrored a 2019 campaign aimed at Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff for policy, that “led the novel’s previous publisher to drop the title from its catalogue.”

The book has been praised for years in nationalist and right-leaning circles. Rundell noted that William F. Buckley Jr. once called it a “great book,” and the novel has also been cited by figures including Hungary’s Viktor Orbán and France’s Marine Le Pen.

Nathan Pinkoski, a senior fellow at the Centre for Renewing America, defended the book and rejected claims that it is “not about a race war.”

“It’s not at the service of an insidious political agenda,” Pinkoski said.

He argued the novel was written before mass immigration became a central political issue and said it points readers toward deeper cultural and spiritual questions.

“Upon hearing of Amazon’s decision, US conservative political commentator Jack Posobiec said it was a blatant example of book banning,” the report said.

“The left loves to talk about book bans, but the books that the left talks about in terms of their book bans are never actually banned books,” Posobiec said.

“If you can go into Barnes & Noble and buy a book off the shelf, then it is not a banned book. If you can go and get a book in your local library, it is not a banned book. This is a banned book.”

Posobiec said French newspapers have been attacking Raspail’s work as “the book of the new right,” and argued that makes it more important for readers to see for themselves what the controversy is about.

Amazon had not publicly commented on the removal at the time of the report. Vauban Books said it plans to keep the title available elsewhere if Amazon does not reverse course.

“Should Amazon be unwilling to restore the paperback listing or indeed remove additional listings, we will ensure that our readers, in the United States and around the world, are still able to purchase The Camp of the Saints,” Rundell said.

“Vauban Books remains committed to keeping the novel in print and accessible worldwide.”

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