This Polish writen book on the ethnic cleansing that occurred in Bosnia against the Muslim population is like the books of that other great Polish travel writer Kapuscinski, written in simple episodes and vignettes that portray the whole larger story of events with great force. This story is also written retrospectively so is seen solely through the eyes of the survivors, many of whom are still searching for family members who went missing during the conflicts that tore communities apart. That in turn provides the harrowing platform as the story tells how mass graves are found and the dead given the time that has elapsed since their deaths can only be identified by bones and any remanants of clothing found. Claims by family members on such bones needs DNA matches before the remains uncovered can be buried and the Muslim families feel they have said goodbye to their dead.
Tochman weaves his story around a number of visits to such events with overlaps occurring between personal memories of the survivors and the inhumanities they saw and suffered especially at the hands of the Serb forces, with the work of the foreign specialists who now help in this medical detective work, piecing bodies together from the remains of bones found in mass hidden graves.
What the book also shows is that whatever the peace settlement that was brokered by the USA with Serbia and Bosnia including in theory but not reality the reinstatement of seized homes to prior owners, it has done very little to fix the deep hatreds that will remain as a result of recent events. The poverty that is the aftermath of the war for all, both victors and losers, is sad proof that ultimately nobody has escaped the fallout from the conflict even though many of the local Serb perpetrators involved in ethnic cleansing seem to face little threat of legal prosecution from the evidence presented.
The author Alan Paton once wrote: "When a deep injury is done to us, we never recover until we forgive". Based on this book's evidence, that forgiveness will be a long time coming in Bosnia at least.