Judge Jeanine: The Dems 'Cannot Come to Grips' With What Has Happened

Conway, Clinton Aides Clash in Heated Post-Election Harvard Forum

Mike Rowe to Flag-Burning Students: If You Hate America, Don't Accept Federal Aid!

A Virginia school has temporarily banned "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" by Mark Twain and "To Kill A Mockingbird" by Harper Lee.

The decision was made after a parent complained that her high school-age son was negatively impacted by racial slurs contained in the books, WAVY reported.

The parent, whose son is biracial, said he was reading "Huckleberry Finn" for a school assignment and couldn't get past a certain page in the novel on which the N-word appeared multiple times.

The parent proposed at a school board meeting that a committee made up of parents and teachers of different cultural backgrounds come up with a list of books that are inclusive for all students.

Per the school’s policy, the request will now go before a committee made up of a principal, librarian, teacher, parent and potentially others. The committee will then make a recommendation to the superintendent.

Watch the "Kelly File" report above, and let us know what you think in the comments.

'Outnumbered': Why the Church-Shaming of HGTV Stars Is Absurd

GA Lawmaker: 'Sanctuary Campuses' Should Not Receive Taxpayer Money

Meghan McCain: Gen. Mattis 'Exactly What We Need' After 'Feckless' Obama Policies

Trump Reacts to White House Downplaying Carrier Deal: 'It's Politics, It's OK'

Teen Says Heroic Pitbull Puppy Saved Her from Would-Be Rapist