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You Can Kill Each Other After I Leave: Refugees, Fascism, and Bloodshed in Greece

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In the vein of George Orwell's Homage to Catalonia and Martha Gellhorn's The View from the Ground, a remarkable work of reportage based on hundreds of hours on-the-ground reporting, that tells how the Greece's far right is trying to destroy the birthplace of democracy

In 2012, the far right Golden Dawn were building a significant street presence in Greece. Over the previous decade they had grown from a tiny group of neofascist brawlers to a formidable vigilante force responsible for multiples murders, street fights and shootings.

On the eve of the 2012 election one of their candidates said that the “knives will come out after the elections.” And the knives did come out. Golden Dawn became a significant parliamentary presence and used it as a platform to escalate their terror campaigns against migrants and leftist across the country. They also became an inspiration for far right groups across Europe and the Americas.

Strickland first arrived in Greece in 2015 to cover the European refugee crisis, eventually moving there in 2017, just as Golden Dawn were ramping up their campaign of terror. With an eye for journalistic detail that recalls Orwell’s reportage in Spain, Strickland traces the antecedents of Golden Dawn to the dark years of Nazi occupation and subsequent military dictatorship and looks at the post 2008 economic crisis that emboldened the far right.

It also introduces us to the resistance forces to the far right, taking us to the Greek islands where people rallied together to support the hundreds of thousands of refugees traveling across the Aegean Sea to the anarchist squats in Athens where activists took over abandoned buildings and opened them up to the refugees, a tactic they viewed as an anti-fascist alternative to dooming migrants to life in the squalid refugee camps.

You Can Kill Each Other After I Leave is an exemplary work of narrative nonfiction and journalism that provides an intimate portrait of the stories of migrants and activists resisting the growth of the far-right, as well as a vivid and shrewd analysis of the evolving political landscape in Greece and Europe.

320 pages, Hardcover

Published April 15, 2025

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About the author

Patrick Strickland

4 books25 followers
Patrick Strickland is a writer and journalist from Texas. He’s the author of three nonfiction books on the far right and migration: You Can Kill Each Other After I Leave (2025), The Marauders (2022), and Alerta! Alerta! Snapshots of Europe’s Antifascist Struggle (2018). His reporting has appeared at The New York Review of Books, The Guardian, Time, Al Jazeera English, and elsewhere. His fiction has appeared in Epiphany, Pithead Chapel, and the Porter House Review, among others. He was a 2024 de Groot Foundation Writer of Note. He is currently the managing editor of Inkstick Media.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Evgenia Chorou.
1 review
November 1, 2024
A book that manages narrate all the milestone events during those years around the topic. An important collection of stories and reporting that is a must-read by both non-Greek and Greek audiences.
Profile Image for Morgan.
211 reviews127 followers
April 14, 2025
You Can Kill Each Other After I Leave is an important history about how the rise of racist violence in Europe helped the Golden Dawn party rise to prominence and the communities who fought against it. Golden Dawn’s rhetoric is terrifyingly familiar and shows what can happen when groups like this gain prominence in parliamentary politics and are enabled by police.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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