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Jerry Adler (Writer) |
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Profile created February 28, 2007 |
High Rise: How 1,000 Men and Women Worked Around the Clock for Five Years and Lost $200
Million Building a Skyscraper (1993)
Chronicles the
money, art, passion, and politics behind the design and construction of a
skyscraper.
The Price of Terror: Lessons of Lockerbie for a World on the Brink (2001) with Allan Gerson
President Bill Clinton called it "an attack against America," but after
Libyan agents planted a bomb aboard Pan Am Flight 103, killing 259 people in
the air and 11 on the ground, America did not strike back. Instead, the
grieving relatives of the victims did the unthinkable -- as mere
civilians-and tried to force Libya to pay for its crime. Lawyers told the
families that they could never sue Libya in American courts, and they were
right. This would require changing a bedrock principle of international law
-- a change that every government in the world feared and fought, including
the United States itself.
Working virtually alone at first, Allan Gerson, a former diplomat and
prosecutor of Nazi war criminals, took on the case and spent the next eight
years on the families' quest for justice. In this high-stakes game of
international power politics and legal maneuvering, there were friendships,
jobs, and reputations lost, but a precious principle -- that of
accountability under the law -- was strengthened and preserved. Now Gerson
and his co-author, Newsweek writer Jerry Adler, follow the threads of this
extraordinary tale back to that deadly night over Lockerbie, Scotland -- and
forward into a new era of international justice, when terrorists will learn
to fear the righteous retribution of their own victims.
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