Hi all......I found these ON-LINE sites in my weekly SCOUT REPORT On-Line Books Page. The second site when you scroll down on this page is about “censored books”......both worth going to. Have fun... xxxxooo Louise King La Jolla, CA http://digital.library.upenn.edu/books/ Originally reviewed in the July 1, 1994 _Scout Report_, the On-Line Books Page has expanded considerably in the intervening six years. Edited by John Mark Ockerbloom since its inception, the site has moved with him in 1999 from Carnegie Mellon to Penn and has increased its listings from about 300 when Scout first visited the site to over 12,000 today. The site only indexes books (all located at other sites) that are full text, free, and not copyrighted. Users can search the listings by author and title, or browse by author, title, subject, new listings, or by serial archives. The site also offers three special exhibits: A Celebration of Women Writers, Banned Books On-Line, and Prize Winners On-Line (under construction). In addition, the site includes a collection of links to other electronic text resources and a list of works in preparation is also provided. An excellent portal for e-books of all kinds. http://www.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/censored/ This companion site to a current exhibition at the University of Virginia Library Special Collections Department explores the history of censorship in America with a selection of books and items drawn from the Library. The exhibit is navigated via a pull-down menu, each section exploring censorship of a particular work, person, or medium with text and images. These include Margaret Sanger, _Grapes of Wrath_, Silenced Minorites, children's books, Elvis, and Censored Film, among others. Rather than focus exclusively on banned books, the site casts a wide net over the subject with excellent results. Well worth a visit.