In the first half of 1994, Rwanda's fragile peace erupted in a full-blown genocide. Upwards of a million people were murdered by their neighbors and even their relatives, by drunken, jobless militiamen, by government soldiers, and possibly by soldiers of another nation entirely in support of the genocidaires. To outsiders, the differences between Hutu and Tutsi are far from obvious but I presume the same is true from their point of view when they look our way, at today's social divisions, mediated by baseball caps as much as anything else. The Rwandan explosion was not inexplicable, but it was unbelievably brutal. These interviews give us first-hand the memories and the grief and the anger of those who survived it in spite of an orchestrated and nearly successful attempt to rid the country of the enemy many perceived in every single Tutsi, down to the unborn. Those interviewed include those living in Rwanda's cities, towns, and villages, a cross section of the country's family structures, mixed marriages, teachers, farmers, students, orphans, widows and engineers. We get their opinions of the neighborhood gacaca courts used to adjudge an impossible number of 'lesser' offenders in bloody crimes which some estimates attribute to as much as 30% of the adult population of the time. The interviewees also share their continuing fear of people they once knew well, who turned on them and might try again. Gut-wrenching at times, but highly recommended, especially as a complementary study to similar work done on the views of the genocidaires themselves.