Thursday, February 12

American Reich: A Murder in Orange County, Neo-Nazis, and a New Age of Hate Eric Lichtblau

 


Hello my lovely readers!

This book didn't work for me. Shame. Let's get into it.

SYNOPSIS
One night in early 2018, while he was home from college, an Ivy League student named Blaze Bernstein snuck out of his parents’ house in Orange County. Waiting for him in a car outside was an old high-school classmate: Sam Woodward, someone who Blaze mostly remembered as a brooding, bigoted loner. But that night, after months of flirtatious messaging, Sam had succeeded in coaxing Blaze—a gay, Jewish sophomore at UPenn—out for a rendezvous. No one would ever see him alive again.

In American Reich, veteran investigative journalist Eric Lichtblau uses the story of Blaze’s life and death to shine a light on the epidemic of hate in Southern California and, increasingly, the nation as a whole. Orange County has long been a bastion of the ultra-right: carved out of farmland as a haven for wealthy whites fleeing the diversifying metropolis to the north, it was the birthplace of the far-right John Birch Society, a hub for neo-Nazi recruitment, and a powerful springboard for race-baiting Republican politicians including Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. But in the years leading up to Blaze’s disappearance, Orange County was changing: like the country as a whole, it was rapidly diversifying, to the outrage of many of its white residents. No one was more opposed to the changes than America’s resurgent neo-Nazi groups, one of which had recently gained a new member: Sam Woodward.

Revealing how Orange County has exported racial hatred to the rest of the country and the world, American Reich weaves this tragic tale together with stories from across the nation, showing what this haunted place and the colliding paths of two of its residents reveal about America's fractured soul and our hope for healing.
MY THOUGHTS
I had high hopes for this book, but I was let down. 

For starters, "Ahmed Arberry." Really? A misspelled name in one of the most important race/hate crimes in recent memory in a book about racism. Ironic.

Also, "Kamela Harris." Where was the editor? 

I know! The editor was too busy censoring this word n****r but leaving other derogatory slurs uncensored. Huh?

And sorry, Blaze, your story is only told in every other chapter. This book was completely uneven to me. I understand needing context about how racist Orange County is/was, but to completely devote several chapters to their shenanigans and relegate Blaze's murder to  pretty much an afterthough left me disappointed with this book.

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