The Independent
Camilla forces U-turn in Roald Dahl censorship
row
Roisin
O'Connor
Fri, 24
February 2023 at 12:24 pm GMT·3-min read
The Queen
Consort has forced publisher Puffin UK to back down on its censorship of Roald
Dahl books after she intervened in the row over the decision to edit his words.
Camilla
gave an impassioned defence of free speech and the right of writers to express
themselves at Clarence House on Thursday 23 February, just days after she let
it be known privately that she had serious concerns over the changes to Dahl’s
books.
Last week,
it emerged that the best-selling children’s books were being rewritten to remove
language considered offensive.
The word
“fat”, for example, had been cut from every book. Augustus Gloop in Charlie and
the Chocolate Factory is instead described as “enormous”, an investigation by
The Telegraph found.
Puffin has
now issued a statement announcing that it will make both the original and
censored versions available to readers.
Francesca
Dow, MD of Penguin Random House Children’s – which owns Puffin UK – said it has
“proudly” published Roald Dahl’s “mischievous” books for more than 40 years.
“We’ve
listened to the debate over the past week which has reaffirmed the
extraordinary power of Roald Dahl’s books and the very real questions around
how stories from another era can be kept relevant for each new generation,” she
said.
“As a
children’s publisher, our role is to share the magic of stories with children
with the greatest thought and care.”
Dow said it
was “both a privilege and a responsibility” to publish books for children and
that Dahl’s books were often the first stories young children would read
independently.
“We also
recognise the importance of keeping Dahl’s classic texts in print. By making
both versions available, we are offering readers the choice to decide how they
experience Roald Dahl’s magical, marvellous stories.
“Roald Dahl
once said: ‘If my books can help children become readers, then I feel I have
accomplished something important.’ At Puffin, we’ll keep pursuing that ambition
for as long as we make books.”
In her
speech to mark the second anniversary of her literary initiative Reading Room
at Clarence House, Camilla urged writers “to remain true to your calling,
unimpeded by those who may wish to curb the freedom of your expression or your
imagination”.
In what was
interpreted as her disapproval of the changes made to the text of Dahl’s
classic books, the Queen Consort said: “Let there be no squeaking like mice but
only roaring like a pride of lions!”
The
decision to censor Dahl’s books also attracted sharp condemnation from a number
of leading literary voices, including Salman Rushdie, who called the edits
“absurd”.
“Roald Dahl
was no angel but this is absurd censorship. Puffin Books and the Dahl estate
should be ashamed,” he tweeted.
American
author Michael Shellenberger also criticised the changes, branding them a case
of “totalitarian censorship”.
“The
publisher of the books of the late Roald Dahl has made hundreds of changes to
them, supposedly to make them more palatable to ‘sensitive’ audiences,” he
wrote. “This is totalitarian censorship and should be broadly condemned by
authors and publishers.”
The Roald
Dahl Classic Collection will now sit alongside the newly released Puffin Roald
Dahl books for young readers, which are designed for children who may be
reading on their own for the first time.

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