Glosslip Exclusive: Andrew Morton On Book Ban: "Vietnam, Serbia and China sell my book, but not the UK?"

Author: Dawn Olsen
Published: April 14, 2008 at 1:39 pm

British biographer Andrew Morton is synonymous with controversy. He's also synonymous with "NYT bestseller," and making publishing companies rich, yet for some reason (and we know the reason) he can't catch a break in his home country. For a place known for exposing some of the most slanderous tabloid journalism, the UK sure is frightened of Scientology and Tom Cruise.

Several outlets are reporting on the continued banning of sales on Morton's book on Cruise in the UK. The Independent points to the harsh libel laws in the country as the reason for the ban:

The American public lapped up the series of lurid accusations contained within, British readers were forced to wait while the book's UK publishers removed any passages that might be deemed anything approaching libellous. Now it appears that Morton's latest offering, Tom Cruise: An Unauthorized Biography, may never be printed this side of the Atlantic. Sources at Macmillan told a Sunday newspaper that by the time lawyers had finished deleting any potentially libelous passages there was "not enough left to make a good read".

Morton spoke with Glosslip exclusively about this latest development and he's clearly unimpressed with the UK's decision to ban any publication or sales of his latest NYT's bestseller: Tom Cruise, An Unauthorized Biography:

I am thrilled that my Tom Cruise biography was a number one New York Times bestseller - my fourth NY Times number one during my writing career. It is for sale in Vietnam,Serbia and China - not countries known for allowing free of expression. Yet in Britain it cannot be sold because of my country's repressive legal system. The gagging of freedom of speech and expression in Britain and the willingness of judges to pay huge settlements to plaintiffs means that Britain is a haven for libel tourists and sharp lawyers. In an increasingly flat world where information is freely available to the rest of the world apart from Britain this will be a growing problem for authors and publishers.

Continued on the next page

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Article Author: Dawn Olsen

A veteran blogger since 2002, Dawn has written for many different blog incarnations ranging from parenting, politics, popular culture, music and everything in between. Her writing can be found Blogcritics.org and her celebrity blog, Glosslip.com. }

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