Freedom to Read Week Hump Day. Have you bought your banned book yet? If not, may I suggest
Eight Men Speak? Written in 1933, reissued just last year by University of Ottawa Press, it's not so much a banned book as a banned play once – only once – staged as part of an effort to free Communist Party of Canada leader Tim Buck from Kingston Penitentiary. The Toronto Police didn't approve, nor did their Winnipeg brothers.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjCpamOGkI2dzZFu6Hd1ODOFPGd7cwVcmkLutXvJl-WoosOFFCErCFgmqEbQ6P1bU3s1j50rSzVoyw68K-c11P1CGbqzLjBwtnh4ROv5ujOgCaObEk6IMczFC6xjJzxyS3K-ged53xSUr0/s1600/1+may+1934.png) |
The Globe & Mail, May Day, 1934 |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjZVLn9MwzE8elevKu-Lr54wzmGBWM8S5cQ42Wn3oucnDm3b1h3NALWil-t_ur0Vo2NNQVSEpUdxB71DGYotZiCrt3njq_X59_4GO43cTSqn-4GYQ2l3z2_l6jWcUhaP4vLmkVzgAwjg38/s1600/Eight+Men+Speak+2+May+1934.png) |
The Ottawa Citizen, 2 May 1934 |
Where mail carriers once worked to prevent its spread, today's will happily deliver
Eight Men Speak to your door… er, post box.