The Boston College Bookstore pulled the controversial best-selling Fifty Shades of Grey trilogy off its shelves Monday after a complaint was filed.

“We don’t want to offend anybody,” BC Bookstore assistant director Tina Plotegher told the Heights. “We pull things off the shelves—it’s just this happens to be a hot topic.”

Author E.L. James published Fifty Shades of Grey in 2011. Because sex sells, James went on to publish Fifty Shades Darker and Fifty Shades Freed. Without having read either of those, this author imagines that the former is the exact same as the original, except darker; the third presumably centers around protagonist Anastasia Steele’s moment of clarity, or the death of Christian Grey – but with sex involved.

I don’t know. Do not tell me. (More on the plot of these books on Jezebel.)

The Fifty Shades of Grey movie hit theaters Valentine’s Day weekend. Protesters stormed the film’s London premiere, claiming Fifty Shades glamorizes abusive relationships.

Students started complaining about Fifty Shades’ appearance in the BC Bookstore after the film’s release.

“They didn’t believe the University should be promoting a book that goes against Catholic religion,” Plotegher told the Heights. “They weren’t complaining to pull it. They were like, ‘Oh wow, they sell that here.’”

According to the Heights, the BC Bookstore had been selling copies of the series for months prior to the release of the film. Plotegher said the bookstore sold all of its copies of Fifty Shades of Grey, and only two copies remain of books two and three.

One emailed complaint – the most recent one – prompted the bookstore’s decision to stop selling James’ Fifty Shades trilogy. The email was sent to both Boston College and the BC Bookstore.

Plotegher told the Heights that the school did not ask the bookstore to stop selling copies. But, rather than risk offending more people, the bookstore decided the best thing to do was to pull the plug on Fifty Shades.