Quotes
“Jacob Kushner’s Look Away is, at one level, a compelling true-crime thriller about a trio of German terrorists on the run. But it’s also a warning about the dangers of white supremacy and right-wing extremism – and about how the fear and hatred of immigrants, combined with the incompetence (or worse) of law enforcement, remains a threat around the world.”—Jeffrey Toobin
“This fascinating book tells two stories: first, how a gang of East German thugs turned neo-Nazi ‘bomb tinkerers’ grew into a network of domestic terrorists, and second, how German authorities let them get away with murder. Jacob Kushner tells the story with cautious condemnation and intimate detail.” —Michael Scott Moore, author of The Desert and the Sea
“Jacob Kushner delivers a harrowing account of right-wing radicalization and violence in modern Germany. This expertly reported story of three friends who committed unspeakable hate crimes is a cautionary tale about ignoring the lessons of history and realities of the present. Kushner reminds us that we can't build a better world without taking a full and accurate stock of the one we have now. Look Away is an urgent book.”—Seyward Darby, author of Sisters in Hate
“With meticulous reporting and an unflinching eye, Jacob Kushner brings to horrific life the story of a white nationalist killing spree in East Germany after the fall of the Berlin Wall. With a novelist’s skills for drama and scene, Kushner shows the dangers of complacency in the face of gathering violence. Such terrible truths, so deftly told, remind us why we should not—and cannot afford to—look away.”—Kim Cross, NYT bestselling author of In Light of All Darkness and What Stands in a Storm
"Jacob Kushner's Look Away is a damning account of a problem seen in the U.S. and around the world: how law enforcement's obsession with informants can blind them to real threats of domestic terror.”—Trevor Aaronson, author of The Terror Factory
“Jacob Kushner’s Look Away is a riveting account of one of contemporary Germany’s most brutal crimes: the serial murders of nine immigrants by a trio of neo-Nazis in the early 2000s. Kushner meticulously reconstructs the young psychopaths’ progression from assault to bank robbery to homicide, and the circle of fellow racists who abetted their crimes. Above all this is an indictment of the racist, incompetent cops who ignored the killers hiding in plain sight, and chose to stigmatize the victims and their families. A searing and infuriating read of a nation still grappling with the ghosts of its past.”—Joshua Hammer, author of The Falcon Thief
“Jacob Kushner’s Look Away has the pacing and taut prose of a crime thriller while also managing to be a smart and thorough analysis of right-wing extremism in Germany. The book moves deftly between the story of a band of neo-Nazis who systematically murdered immigrants and the larger picture of the society that bred them and the German officials who consistently failed to see the string of killings for what they were: a connected series of hate crimes.”—Alexander Stille, author of The Sullivanians
“A chilling account of the rise of neo-Nazism and xenophobia in Germany, Look Away is a warning to all of us that white supremacist terror remains a global threat. Jacob Kushner is a masterful storyteller who never loses sight of the humanity of his story’s immigrant victims and their families. An important and urgent book.”—Julia Lee, author of Biting the Hand
“Discomfiting as it is meticulously researched, Look Away is not just a terrifying window into revived German extremism but a warning to the world—a reminder that, at the end of the day, violent racial authoritarianism knows no borders.”—Jonathan M. Katz, author of Gangsters of Capitalism: Smedley Butler, the Marines, and the Making and Breaking of America’s Empire
"A must-read for anyone who wonders how terror plots come together and why powerful leaders ignore them. Kushner's natural, commanding voice recalls the classic nonfiction writers John Hersey and William Langewiesche, and the depth of his reporting is only exceeded by the streamlined, engrossing way he tells his story—a story about the questions that lie at the heart of politics in so many societies: what is "terror" and who are its real victims?"
—Eve Fairbanks, author of The Inheritors