We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families: Stories from Rwanda We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We Will Be Killed with Our Families is the winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction. |
From inside the book
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... murder into actual peoples' mouths and inhabiting it in actual peoples' stories." — Mark Gevisser, Newsday "A harsh but elegant moral reckoning " — The New Yorker "Thoughtful, beautifully written, and important... we want to pass it ...
... murder everyone in the Tutsi minority. The government, and an astounding number of its subjects, imagined that by exterminating the Tutsi people they could make the world a better place, and the mass killing had followed. All at once ...
... murdered. Sergeant Francis had high, rolling girlish hips, and he walked and stood with his butt stuck out behind him, an oddly purposeful posture, tipped forward, driven. He was, at once, candid and briskly official. His English had ...
... murdered wife and children, found themselves unaccountably alive. Manase left immediately. He made his way to the nearby village of Murambi, where he joined up with a small band of survivors from other massacres who had once more taken ...
... its head, so that murder and rape become the rule? What if innocence becomes a crime and the person who protects his neighbor is counted as an "accomplice"? Does it then become normal for tear gas to be used to make people in 34.